Perioperative Quality Initiative (POQI) consensus statement on fundamental concepts in perioperative fluid management: fluid responsiveness and venous capacitance.
Greg S MartinDavid A KaufmanPaul E MarikNathan I ShapiroDenny Z H LevettJohn WhittleDavid B MacLeodDesiree ChappellJonathan LaceyTom WoodcockKay MitchellManu L N G MalbrainTom M WoodcockDaniel MartinChris H E ImrayMichael W ManningHenry HoweMichael P W GrocottMonty G MythenTong J GanTimothy E MillerPublished in: Perioperative medicine (London, England) (2020)
We discussed the clinical and physiological evidence underlying fluid responsiveness and venous capacitance as relevant factors in fluid management and developed consensus statements with clinical implications for a broad group of clinicians involved in intravenous fluid therapy. Two key concepts emerged as follows: (1) The ultimate goal of fluid therapy and hemodynamic management is to support the conditions that enable normal cellular metabolic function in order to produce optimal patient outcomes, and (2) optimal fluid and hemodynamic management is dependent on an understanding of the relationship between pressure, volume, and flow in a dynamic system which is distensible with variable elastance and capacitance properties.