Fluid Responsiveness Is Associated with Successful Weaning after Liver Transplant Surgery
Ricardo Castro, Pablo Born, Felipe Muñoz, Camila Guzmán, Eduardo Kattan, Glenn Hernandez, Jan Bakker

TL;DR
This study shows that assessing fluid responsiveness in liver transplant patients can help predict successful weaning from ventilation despite high fluid balance.
Contribution
The study introduces the use of passive leg-raising to guide weaning in liver transplant patients with high fluid balance.
Findings
Fluid-responsive patients had increased cardiac index during spontaneous breathing trials.
All fluid-responsive patients at T2 achieved successful extubation.
Fluid-unresponsive patients faced weaning difficulties.
Abstract
A positive fluid balance may evolve to fluid overload and associate with organ dysfunctions, weaning difficulties, and increased mortality in ICU patients. We explored whether individualized fluid management, assessing fluid responsiveness via a passive leg-raising maneuver (PLR) before a spontaneous breathing trial (SBT), is associated with less extubation failure in ventilated patients with a high fluid balance admitted to the ICU after liver transplantation (LT). We recruited 15 LT patients in 2023. Their postoperative fluid balance was +4476 {3697, 5722} mL. PLR maneuvers were conducted upon ICU admission (T1) and pre SBT (T2). Cardiac index (CI) changes were recorded before and after each SBT (T3). Seven patients were fluid-responsive at T1, and twelve were responsive at T2. No significant differences occurred in hemodynamic, respiratory, and perfusion parameters between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHemodynamic Monitoring and Therapy · Renal function and acid-base balance · Thermoregulation and physiological responses
