How do you use IVC caliber and collapsibility to guide decisions about diuresis?
Answer from: at Community Practice
I use IVC caliber in conjunction with my lung exam to assist with the assessment of right and left atrial pressures respectively. The IVC assessment has many caveats in different patient populations, and evaluation with POCUS can be done in two planes to better understand IVC shape.Caveats - IVC siz...
It is pretty reliable to estimate RA pressure in the non-intubated patient.
In the absence of pHTN, this can be used in conjunction with labs to help guide management.
In the ICU patient, they frequently have arterial lines, so I would have the team transduce the central line 1-2 times a day to fo...
I agree with all the points made by Dr. @Silver. I rarely use IVC metrics as an isolated marker to guide diuresis (except when measures are at the low end of the extreme). In addition to clinical and laboratory markers, my POCUS assessment for volume status (in a spontaneously breathing patient) inc...
Static CVP measurements (for which IVC measurements are a proxy) are confounded by several factors, including abdominal pressures and mechanical ventilation. Only in the extreme (CVP <5, or IVC diam <2.1 cm with >50% collapse with respiration) is it potentially informative in diuresis decis...