Fluid Stewardship in Critical Care
1️⃣ Introduction
Fluids are not just supportive therapy — they are powerful drugs with dose-dependent toxicity.
Persistent positive fluid balance has been independently associated with:
- Increased mortality in sepsis
- Worsened outcomes in ARDS
- Higher incidence of AKI
- Prolonged mechanical ventilation
2️⃣ Why Fluid Stewardship is Needed
The Problem of Liberal Fluid Use
Historically:
- Early aggressive fluid resuscitation became standard after early goal-directed therapy (EGDT).
- However, excessive fluid accumulation proved harmful.
Large ICU cohorts demonstrate:
- Cumulative positive balance correlates with mortality.
- Fluid overload >10% body weight significantly increases death risk.
3️⃣ Pathophysiology of Fluid Toxicity
1️⃣ Endothelial Glycocalyx Damage
In sepsis:
- Inflammation destroys glycocalyx.
- Capillary permeability increases.
- Fluids leak into interstitium → edema.
2️⃣ Organ-Specific Effects
|
Organ |
Effect of Fluid Overload |
|
Lungs |
Pulmonary edema → ARDS |
|
Kidney |
Renal interstitial edema → AKI |
|
Heart |
Ventricular dilation |
|
Gut |
Bowel edema → ileus |
|
Abdomen |
Intra-abdominal hypertension |
4️⃣ Definition of Fluid Stewardship
Fluid stewardship is:
A systematic, goal-directed approach to fluid administration and removal across all phases of critical illness.
It integrates:
- Hemodynamic monitoring
- Dynamic assessment of fluid responsiveness
- Timely de-escalation
- Active fluid removal strategies
5️⃣ The ROSE Model of Fluid Therapy
Widely adopted conceptual framework:
R – Resuscitation Phase
- Immediate life-saving fluids
- Correct hypotension & hypoperfusion
- Often positive balance unavoidable
O – Optimization Phase
- Assess fluid responsiveness
- Avoid blind fluid boluses
- Introduce vasopressors early
S – Stabilization Phase
- Maintenance only
- Replace ongoing losses
- Avoid accumulation
E – Evacuation (Deresuscitation) Phase
- Remove excess fluid
- Diuretics or CRRT
- Target negative balance
6️⃣ Core Principles of Fluid Stewardship
1️⃣ Fluids Are Drugs
Each prescription must specify:
- Type
- Dose
- Rate
- Duration
- Indication
- Endpoint
2️⃣ Assess Fluid Responsiveness
Only 40–50% of hypotensive ICU patients respond to fluids.
Preferred Dynamic Tests
- Passive Leg Raise (PLR)
- Stroke Volume Variation (SVV)
- Pulse Pressure Variation (PPV)
- IVC ultrasound variability
- End-expiratory occlusion test
CVP alone is unreliable.
VExUS (Venous Excess Ultrasound) in Fluid Stewardship
Evaluates:
- IVC size
- Hepatic vein Doppler
- Portal vein Doppler
- Renal vein Doppler
Helps detect venous congestion before organ failure.
3️⃣ Early Vasopressors
In septic shock:
- Start norepinephrine early.
- Do not keep giving fluids for hypotension alone.
4️⃣ Avoid Maintenance Fluids in Stable ICU Patients
Common error:
“Keep 100 mL/hr running”(it comes via holiday-segar formula for 60 kg patient )
If:
- Patient on enteral feeds
- Hemodynamically stable
- No ongoing losses
→ Maintenance IV fluids often unnecessary.and dont use holiday segar formula
Daily Reqirement is – 25–30 mL/kg/day
5️⃣ Daily Fluid Balance Review
Every ICU round must include:
- 24-hour input/output
- Cumulative balance of all days since icu admission
- Weight change
- Need for ongoing fluids

