Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Oliguria is a poor marker for perfusion

Oliguria is an overused parameter to guide resuscitation  and  must  always  be  interpreted  within  the  clinical  context

The 2016 version of  the “Surviving Sepsis Campaign” no longer mentions a UO of  ≥0.5 mL/
 kg/h as a goal of resuscitation. Isolated oliguria with-out  signs  of  vasoplegia,  hypovolemia,  or  low  cardiac output  is  unlikely  to  be  explained  by  a  systemic  hemo-dynamic  cause  and  must  not  evoke  the  administration of additional fluids or vasopressors.

Oliguria should also not  trigger  further  hemodynamic  interventions  in  the clinical  setting  of  established  AKI.

 Oliguria resulting from vasodilatory hypotension  should  preferably  be  treated  with  a vasopressor.  However, a MAP of 80–85 mmHg as target does not seem to be  a  beneficial  strategy,  except  in  patients  with  chronic hypertension.

Reference articles:

Does this critically ill patient with oliguria need more fuids, a vasopressor, or neither?


The Ten Principles behind Arterial Pressure











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