2013
DOI: 10.1007/s00134-013-2854-7
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Evidence-based fluid therapy

Abstract: Fluid therapy is one of the most frequent interventions given to hospitalised patients, and one-third of all patients in intensive care units (ICUs) worldwide receive fluid for resuscitation each day [1]. As these patients have considerable mortality rates, any differences in outcome between different types of fluids will have a marked effect on the overall mortality of critically ill patients. Appropriate fluid therapy is therefore likely to improve global health.For decades this has been one side of a diffic… Show more

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“…This suggests that the currently recommended maximal HES dose might still be harmful for patients. Presently there are no data from high-quality trials showing that 6% HES130 improved any patient-important outcomes, while there are consistent signals for harm 35 . Our findings are in line with the findings of adverse effects of synthetic colloids that result from large RCTs, systematic reviews, in vitro studies and animal studies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This suggests that the currently recommended maximal HES dose might still be harmful for patients. Presently there are no data from high-quality trials showing that 6% HES130 improved any patient-important outcomes, while there are consistent signals for harm 35 . Our findings are in line with the findings of adverse effects of synthetic colloids that result from large RCTs, systematic reviews, in vitro studies and animal studies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%