Plasma Bicarbonate as a Determinant of Fluid-Induced Acid–Base Changes in Postoperative Critically Ill Patients: A Retrospective Analysis
Francesco Zadek, Davide Ottolina, Luca Zazzeron, Matteo Nafi, Jessica Bastreghi, Lucia Gandini, Thomas Langer, Pietro Caironi

TL;DR
This study shows that pre-infusion plasma bicarbonate levels influence how intravenous fluids affect acid-base balance in postoperative ICU patients.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that individualized fluid selection based on baseline bicarbonate can better manage acid-base changes in ICU patients.
Findings
Lower pre-infusion HCO3− levels correlate with greater acid-base changes after fluid infusion.
Fluid-induced acid-base changes are strongly influenced by the difference between SIDINF and pre-infusion HCO3−.
Higher infused volumes amplify acid-base changes when the SIDINF-HCO3− difference is large.
Abstract
Background: Intravenous fluids modify acid–base balance by changing plasma strong ion difference (SIDPL) and total non-volatile weak acids. Experimental data suggest that pre-infusion plasma bicarbonate (HCO3−) may further modulate these effects. We tested this hypothesis in a large cohort of postoperative ICU patients receiving intravenous fluids. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed all-consecutive post-operative ICU admissions over a 21-month period who received fluid therapy. Fluid inputs/outputs, plasma electrolytes, and arterial blood gases were collected from admission to 9:00 A.M. of postoperative day one. Average SID of infused fluids (SIDINF) was calculated, and SIDPL and standard base excess variations (ΔSBE) were assessed. Patients were stratified by SIDINF tertiles (low, <41.0 mEq/L; medium, 41.2–54.6 mEq/L; high, ≥55.0 mEq/L), median pre-infusion HCO3− (24.3 [22.4–26.3]…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRenal function and acid-base balance · Trauma, Hemostasis, Coagulopathy, Resuscitation · Hemodynamic Monitoring and Therapy
