Fluid therapy Flashcards

1
Q

Crystalloid

A

Contains small molecules

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2
Q

isotonic crystalloid purpose

A

To manage dehydration and hypovolaemia

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3
Q

isotonic crystalloid examples

A

Hartmanns, 0.9% NaCl

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4
Q

Colloid

A

contains large molecules that can’t cross semi-perm membranes

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5
Q

5 routes of fluid admin

A

Per os (mouth)
sub cut
IV
central venous access
IO

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6
Q

Volume overload symptoms (hypervolaemia)

A

dyspnoea, tachypnoea, crackles

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7
Q

Venous engorgement symptoms

A

jugular distension, peripheral oedema, cavitary effusions

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8
Q

fluid distribution

A

60% is water- 55% extravascular- 40% inside cells, 15% outside cells

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9
Q

hypovolaemia vs dehydration

A

hypovolaemia is fluid lost quickly from the intravascular space, dehydration is fluid lost slowly from extravascular space

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10
Q

consequences of hypovolaemia

A

blood loss-> reduced preload-> reduced stroke volume-> decreased CO-> vasoconstriction and tachycardia-> BP drop

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11
Q

patient assessment of IV volume

A

HR
pulse quality
MM colour
CRT (>2secs)
BP
mentation (mental status)
temp

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12
Q

patient assessment of extravascular volume

A

moistness of MM
skin turgor
weight
globe position
urine output

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13
Q

clinicopathological parameters

A

PCV, TS
urea, creatinine
USG

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14
Q

shock

A

an imbalance between oxygen delivery to the tissues and oxygen consumption by the tissues

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15
Q

4 types of shock

A

hypovolaemia
cardiogenic
obstructive (tension pneumothorax, thromboembolism)
distributive (uncontrolled inflammatory response)

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16
Q

physiological response to hypovolaemic shock

A

neurohormonal response:
- catecholamine release (increases HR, vasoconstriction)
- activation of renin-angiotension-aldosterone system (increases Na + water retention
- ADH release
- spleen contraction (releases more RBC)

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17
Q

steps for use of isotonic crystalloids

A
  1. bolus of fluid 10-20ml/kg for dogs, 5-15ml/kg for cats over 15-20mins
  2. reassess
  3. admin 45-50ml/kg max for dogs, 30-35ml/kg max for cats
  4. if no change, reassess diagnosis and ongoing blood loss
18
Q

shock dose (total blood vol of patient)

A

80-90ml/kg in dogs
50-55ml/kg in cats

19
Q

determining efficacy of fluid therapy treatment

A
  1. reassess every 12-30mins
  2. bp (could be compensatory)
  3. lactate levels
  4. ECG (monitor arrythmias)
20
Q

hypertonic fluid uses

A
  • common in large animals
  • lowers initial vol reqiured for vol resus
  • reduces cerebral oedema
21
Q

large animal fluid resus

A

1L hypertonic fluid followed with 10L isotonic fluid
- stomach tube/IV

22
Q

indications for colloid fluid therapy

A

tissue oedema, hypovolaemia, low oncotic pressure

23
Q

signs of dehydration

A

tachy MM, slow CRT, sunken eyes, bradycardia

24
Q

osmotic pressure

A

the minimum pressure which needs to be applied to a solution to prevent the inward flow of its pure solvent across a semipermeable membrane

25
Q

oncotic pressure

A

a form of osmotic pressure induced by the proteins in a blood vessel’s plasma which causes a pull on fluid back into the capillary

26
Q

indications for blood testing in patients recieving fluid therapy

A

for all animals sick enough to warrant hospitalisation and fluid therapy
- every 24-48hrs
- sooner if signs of complications

27
Q

blood tests that should be considered using in dogs and cats recieving fluid therapy

A
  • PCV and TS
  • blood urea nitrogen and creatinine
  • urine specific gravity (USG)
  • lactate
  • glucose
  • electrolytes
  • acid-base status
28
Q

3 electrolytes

A
  • sodium
  • potassium
  • chloride
29
Q

causes of hyperkalaemia

A
  • urethral obstruction
  • uroabdomen
  • hypoadrenocorticism
  • renal failure
30
Q

managing hyperkalaemia

A
  • IVFT (dilutes K+ in blood)
  • calcium gluconate (stabilises myocardium)
  • glucose +/- soluble insulin (potassium -> intracellular spaces)
  • treat underlying cause
31
Q

causes of hypokalaemia

A
  • GI tract losses (vomiting, diarrhoea)
  • urinary tract losses, diuretics
32
Q

managing hypokalaemia

A
  • address underlying cause
  • K+ supplementation
    • KCl can be added to fluid therapy
33
Q

metabolic acidosis causes

A
  • loss of base from the body
  • failure to excrete acid
  • accumulation of acid
34
Q

metabolic acidosis body compensation

A

body counteracts this by blowing off CO2 through hyperventilation
- will have low pH and pCO2

35
Q

metabolic alkalosis causes

A
  • increase in hydrogen bicarbonate loevels
  • loss of acid from body
36
Q

metabolic alkalosis body compensation

A

hypoventilation which lowers pH

37
Q

respiratory acidosis causes

A

a rise in blood CO2
- upper airway obstruction
- pulmonary effusion (fluid on the lungs)
- pulmonary disease
- CNS depression

38
Q

respiratory acidosis body compensation

A
  • kidneys retain more bicarbonate and excrete H+ ions to increase pH
39
Q

respiratory alkalosis causes

A

a fall in blood CO2
- fear, pain, excitement, pyrexia
- hyperventilation

40
Q

respiratory alkalosis body compensation

A
  • eliminate bicarbonate via kidneys to lower pH
41
Q

fluid therapy preferrable for acidotic patients

A

hartmann’s
- contains lactate as a buffer

42
Q

fluid therapy preferrable for alkalotic patients

A

0.9% NaCl
- slightly acidic