Assessing Vascular Tone and Fluid Balance in Septic and Cardiogenic Shock: A Feasibility Study on Skin Water Loss as a Diagnostic Tool
Sabrina Kopp, Ingo Sagoschen, Susanne Helena Karbach, Martin Russwurm, Philipp Lurz, Thomas Münzel, Johannes Wild

TL;DR
This study explores whether measuring skin water loss can help assess fluid balance and vascular tone in patients with septic or cardiogenic shock.
Contribution
It introduces TEWL as a potential non-invasive diagnostic tool for monitoring vascular tone and fluid balance in ICU patients.
Findings
TEWL values were consistent across most body sites except the forehead.
Formula-based estimates of skin water loss showed significant deviations compared to TEWL measurements.
Intra-individually normalized TEWL values correlated negatively with vascular tone.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Fluid management in shock remains a clinical challenge, with ongoing debate about optimal guidance. Despite advanced technologies, fluid balance assessment is often inadequate. The SkInShock study investigated whether transepidermal water loss (TEWL) measurements could improve fluid balance estimation and serve as a non-invasive marker of vascular tone in patients with septic or cardiogenic shock. Methods: In this prospective single-center feasibility study (DRKS00027981), TEWL was measured daily in eight mechanically ventilated patients using a Tewameter® (Courage+Khazaka, Cologne, Germany), which quantifies transcutaneous water evaporation. Total daily skin water loss was calculated either via direct TEWL measurements or an estimation formula (6 mL/kg/day + 20%/°C deviation from 37 °C). Systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) was measured simultaneously using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHemodynamic Monitoring and Therapy · Thermoregulation and physiological responses · Body Composition Measurement Techniques
