Venous congestion, which is a phenomenon described in cardiology and post-operative cardiac surgery, is responsible for an increase in morbidity and mortality. Indeed, it can lead to kidney failure, liver failure, prolonged ileus, scarring complications, and neurological disorders. Clinical and ultrasound indications have been described to diagnose this condition. To date, this phenomenon is poorly known and not described in intensive care patients outside the cardiac context. However, intensive care patients can present the risk factors associated with the occurrence of congestion: acute cardiac failure, significant water-salt overload, and/or fluid distribution anomalies. Thus, observational studies have found an association between the input-output balance, the quantity of salt-water intake, the presence of right heart dysfunction and the occurrence of acute kidney failure, digestive disorders, hypoxemia and a prolonged stay in intensive care. The presence of a congestive condition is medically treatable since diuretic decongestion is associated with improved cardiac outcomes. It is therefore necessary, in an intensive care context, to be able to define and diagnose this state of venous congestion, to study its prevalence, and to confirm the existence of a link with organ failure in order to pave the way to known adapted treatment options.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
185
haemoglobin, haematocrit, sodium, chloraemia, total protein, albumin, L-lactate, pro-BNP, creatinine, uremia, AST, ALT, GGT, ALP, bilirubin, prothrombin time, urinary test if available.
echocardiography (FEVG, subaortic ITV before and after LJP, cardiac index, MAPSE, mitral flow doppler, RVFAC, FEVD, STDVD, VD/VG ratio, TAPSE, tricuspid S wave, IT with PAPs, tricuspid flow doppler), Doppler of suprahepatic veins (S wave, D wave, S/D ratio), renal doppler (VII, RRI, aspect of venous flow in cortical and hilar), femoral venous doppler, doppler of the portal trunk, diameter of the VCI.
eason for hospitalisation, co-morbidities, IGS2 score, SOFA, haemodynamic signs (BP, HR, CVP), sinus rhythm or not, temperature, diuresis, weight, input-output assessment, use of dialysis, ventilatory parameters (intubation, mode, FiO2(%), Vt, FR, PEEP, plateau pressure, driving pressure), state of shock (sepsis, postoperative, haemorrhagic, cardiogenic), transfusion (type, number), catecholamines (type, dose, duration), diuretics and dose, clinical criteria of venous congestion (jugular turgidity, hepato-jugular reflux, hepatosplenomegaly, pitting oedemas of the lower limbs, hepatalgia), neurological evaluation (Glasgow Coma Scale, CAM-ICU), time to resume enteral feeding and bowel movements, weight.
Chu Dijon Bourogne
Dijon, France
the presence of venous congestion
Time frame: From date of inclusion until the date of discharge from hospital or date of death from any cause, whichever came first, assessed up to 28 day
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