1. How to Perform Indexing of Extravascular Lung Water
- Author
-
Ludwig Schürer, S. Wolf, Julia F. Landscheidt, Alexander Riess, Christianto B. Lumenta, and Patrick Friederich
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,Acute Lung Injury ,Thermodilution ,Hemodynamics ,Pulmonary Edema ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Cohort Studies ,Text mining ,Germany ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Lead (electronics) ,Aged ,Balance (ability) ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,business.industry ,Thoracic cavity ,Perioperative ,Middle Aged ,Confidence interval ,Surgery ,Lung water ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Extravascular Lung Water ,Cardiology ,Female ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND Extravascular lung water is a quantitative marker of the amount of fluid in the thoracic cavity besides the vasculature. Indexing to both predicted and actual body weight have been proposed to compare different individuals and provide a uniform range of normal. OBJECTIVE We explored extravascular lung water measured by single-indicator transpulmonary thermodilution in a large cohort of patients without cardiopulmonary instability, in order to evaluate current and alternative indexing methods. DESIGN Prospective, observational. SETTING Neurosurgical ICU in a tertiary referral academic teaching hospital. PATIENTS One hundred and one consecutive patients requiring elective brain tumor surgery and postoperative ICU surveillance. INTERVENTIONS None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Indexed to predicted body weight, females had a mean extravascular lung water of 9.1 (SD=3.1, range: 5-23) mL/kg and males of 8.0 (SD=2.0, range: 4-19) mL/kg (p
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF