Fluid balance

1️⃣ Introduction

Fluid balance assessment is one of the most fundamental skills in critical care medicine.It is often the most neglected part and widely misunderstood.

MYTH 1-assuming positive/negative balance just by 24 hour input/output balance 

MYTH2- Using  holiday-segar formula for calculating daily fluid reqirements 


2️⃣ Physiology of Fluid Compartments

Total Body Water (TBW)

  • 60% body weight (adult male)
  • 50–55% (female)
  • in elderly, obesity

Compartments

Compartment

% Body Weight

Intracellular Fluid (ICF)

40%

Extracellular Fluid (ECF)

20%

Interstitial

15%

Plasma

5%


Starling Forces & Fluid Shifts

Fluid movement depends on:

  • Hydrostatic pressure
  • Oncotic pressure
  • Capillary permeability
  • Lymphatic drainage

In critical illness, glycocalyx damage + capillary leak = third spacing.


3️⃣ What is Input–Output Balance?

Input–Output balance = Total fluid intake – Total fluid loss

It is assessed:

  • Hourly in ICU
  • Every 4–6 hours in wards
  • Daily cumulative


4️⃣ Components of Input (Fluid Intake)

A. Intravenous Fluids

  • Crystalloids (NS, RL, Plasma-Lyte)
  • Colloids (Albumin)
  • Blood products
  • Drug infusions (vasopressors, antibiotics)
  • TPN

 Often forgotten:
Drug diluents and line flushes add significant volume


B. Enteral Intake

  • Oral fluids
  • Enteral feeding (tube feeds)
  • Oral medications in liquid form


C. Metabolic Water

Produced during oxidation (~300 mL/day)
Clinically negligible in ICU documentation


5️⃣ Components of Output (Fluid Loss)

A. Measurable (Obligatory)

Source

Normal Value

Urine

0.5–1 mL/kg/hr

Stool

100–200 mL/day

Drain output

Variable

NG suction

Variable

Dialysis ultrafiltration

Recorded


B. Insensible Losses

Not directly measurable.

Source

Normal

Skin

300–400 mL/day

Lungs

300–400 mL/day

Total

600–800 mL/day

Increased In:

  • Fever ( 10% per °C rise)
  • Tachypnea
  • Mechanical ventilation (dry gases)
  • Burns
  • Open abdomen


6️⃣ Methods of Monitoring I/O

1️⃣ Urine Output (UO)

Most important real-time marker.

Targets:

  • ≥0.5 mL/kg/hr (general ICU)
  • ≥1 mL/kg/hr (burns)
  • ≥2 mL/kg/hr (rhabdomyolysis)

According to KDIGO AKI criteria, oliguria:

  • <0.5 mL/kg/hr for 6 hours


2️⃣ Fluid Balance Charts

Hourly ICU chart

Daily cumulative balance must be calculated.


3️⃣ Body Weight

1 kg weight gain = ~1 liter fluid retention

Best indicator of cumulative fluid balance.


4️⃣ Central Venous Pressure (CVP)

Limited value in predicting fluid responsiveness.
No longer recommended as sole guide (modern critical care guidelines).


5️⃣ Dynamic Indices (Better Than Static)

  • Pulse pressure variation (PPV)
  • Stroke volume variation (SVV)
  • Passive leg raise (PLR)
  • IVC ultrasound

8️⃣ Positive vs Negative Fluid Balance

Positive Fluid Balance

Risks:

  • Pulmonary edema
  • ARDS
  • Delayed weaning
  • AKI
  • Increased mortality (shown in septic shock, ARDS, trauma)

Excess >5–10% body weight worse outcomes.


Negative Fluid Balance

Goal in recovery phase:

  • Improve lung function
  • Improve oxygenation
  • Reduce ICU stay

FACTT trial showed conservative strategy improved ventilator-free days.



🔟 Complications of Improper I/O Monitoring

  • Under-resuscitation shock, AKI
  • Over-resuscitation pulmonary edema
  • Abdominal compartment syndrome
  • Delayed wound healing


Fluid Overload Definition

Fluid accumulation >10% of baseline body weight

Associated with:

  • Increased ICU mortality
  • Need for RRT


Fluid Stewardship (Modern Concept)

Just like antibiotic stewardship:

Ask daily:

  • Does patient need more fluids?
  • Can we remove fluids?