Current opinion in critical care
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There is significant controversy for perioperative fluid management. This review discusses the evidence from clinical studies, basic research, and systematic reviews to provide a summary of the current best practice in this area. ⋯ Although potentially life-saving, evidence points to significant hazards associated with various types and use-strategies for intravenous fluids. Like other drugs, intravenous fluids should be used with caution for specific indications, in specific amounts, and with careful attention to potential adverse effects associated with various products. An individualized approach to perioperative fluid therapy is recommended.
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We presume that biomarkers will improve identification of patients at risk, leading to interventions and treatments that reduce perioperative adverse events. Risk stratification is multifactorial, and a biomarker must add information to this process, thereby redistributing patients to either higher or lower risk categories, to improve the allocation of expensive and risky interventions. This review focuses on the utility of three cardiac biomarkers in perioperative management. ⋯ The findings here suggest an expanded role for postoperative cTn surveillance; however, the precise populations that benefit, or the interventions required, are not yet defined. The encouraging data for the other two biomarkers need more investigations before adopting them into routine clinical use.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Aug 2013
ReviewReducing perioperative cardiac morbidity and mortality: is this the right goal?
One million people die annually following noncardiac surgery and 4% of patients suffer an adverse cardiac event after surgery. As the number of people having surgery grows, our ability to risk stratify patients becomes more important, particularly in the setting of perioperative myocardial ischemia/necrosis. ⋯ The presence of troponin elevations following noncardiac surgery, particularly in at-risk patients, may enable practitioners to better identify high-risk patients in the postoperative setting. After recognizing those patients at increased risk for poor outcomes, practitioners can then make interventions, which may decrease the patients' in-hospital, 30-day and potentially long-term mortality.