19 Oct 09
Goal-directed perioperative fluid management: why, when and how?
By H Kehlet and M Bundgaard-Nielsen
Anesthesiology 2009;110:453-455
Principles of perioperative fluid management have received increased interest in recent years within type and amount of crystalloid and colloid, the concept of individualized goal-directed cardiovascular optimization (GDT), and finally assessed on a procedure-specific basis. In this issue, Kimberger et al., investigated the underlying tissue mechanisms during GDT management with crystalloids or colloids for abdominal surgery with a colonic anastomosis. This elegant experimental study in pigs included detailed techniques of postsurgical assessments of conventional cardiovascular variables (blood pressure, heart rate, urinary output) and microcirculatory blood flow and tissue oxygen tension in healthy and perianastomotic colonic tissue. Three types of fluid management were instituted at the end of surgery: restricted Ringer lactate (RL) versus GDT RL or GDT colloid to achieve a mixed venous oxygen saturation (Svo2) greater than 60%.