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RECRUITING
NCT06415916

Ultrasound and Clinical Approach for the Dynamic Assessment of Fluid Tolerance in the Intensive Care Unit

Sponsor: Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

A major cause of admission to intensive care is acute circulatory failure resulting from organ hypoperfusion due to factors such as hypotension and myocardial dysfunction. The standard treatment, including volume expansion and vasopressor/inotropic agents, often leads to water and sodium overload, increasing the risk of morbidity and mortality in the ICU. The combination of this overload and myocardial dysfunction lead to venous congestion, particularly affecting the lungs, kidneys and gastrointestinal system. Effective fluid management is therefore crucial to maintain a balance between adequate tissue perfusion and prevention of fluid overload. Fluid tolerance, defined as a patient's ability to tolerate additional volumes of solutes without adverse effects, is assessed retrospectively by clinical signs (capillary refill time, oedema, hepatojugular reflux, etc.) and ultrasound scores (VExUS score, LUS score, etc.). However, these indicators do not fully reflect the complexity of venous congestion in patients with various conditions. Assessing fluid tolerance remains a challenge in clinical practice. It requires a personalised approach and the use of dynamic tests such as passive leg raising to predict response to vascular filling. Despite their common use, there are no studies evaluating the ability of changes in congestion markers during passive leg raising to predict fluid tolerance. In conclusion, the main hypothesis is that changes in ultrasound congestion parameters (VExUS score, LUS score and others) during passive leg raising could predict a patient's subsequent tolerance to volume expander.

Official title: Ultrasound and Clinical Approach for the Dynamic Assessment of Fluid Tolerance in the Intensive Care Unit : FLUID-REACT Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

100

Start Date

2024-03-15

Completion Date

2028-03

Last Updated

2026-02-12

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Cardiac ultrasound

Performed 5 times between 0 and 120 minutes

PROCEDURE

Lung ultrasound

Performed 5 times between 0 and 120 minutes

Locations (1)

Chu Dijon Bourgogne

Dijon, France