Title of article :
Fluid Resuscitation, Which Fluid is the Best for Each Patient? A Systematic
Review and Meta Analysis
Author/Authors :
Ebrahimi Ali نويسنده Undergraduate Student, Student Research Committee, School of Dentistry, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran. , Rasouli Hamid Reza نويسنده Trauma Research Center , Heshmati Seyed Mohammad نويسنده Trauma Research Center, Baqiyatallah University of Medical
Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Context Fluid therapy is the basis of resuscitation; however,
there has been a heated debate on the choice of appropriate fluid. This
study mainly aimed to determine which fluid is correlated with a decline
in mortality rate and can be the most suitable choice for each group of
patients. Evidence Acquisition We conducted a systematic search on
Google Scholar, Web of Science, Scopus, BMJ Journals, Thieme, Path
Consult, BIDS Index, Embase, Medline, and Cochrane Controlled Trials up
to April 2016. The relevant studies were those that provided a
comparison between the effects of different fluids on the mortality rate
of patients. Two independent authors participated in the evaluating
methodological quality, selecting eligible studies, and extracting the
relevant data from the studies. Results We selected 26 out of 2724
potential randomized controlled trials (RCTs) from the databases for
both quantitative and qualitative analyses resulting in a total of 22882
patients receiving either colloid or crystalloid fluids. The
approximated pooled Relative risk (RR) for the death of patients who had
been resuscitated with crystalloid fluid therapy rather than colloid
fluid therapy was 1.008. This meta-analysis illustrated that there was a
decline in the mortality rate with borderline significance in both
traumatic and hypovolemic patients through utilizing colloid fluids. The
mortality reduced more by using dextran and albumin than using
crystalloid fluids. Conclusions The results of this meta-analysis show
that colloid fluids can increase the successful resuscitation rate
compared to crystalloid fluids especially in traumatic and hypovolemic
patients.Some of the colloids like albumin and dextran have a positive
effect on reducing the mortality rate but others like Hetastarch (HES)
increase the mortality rate compared to normal saline (NS).
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics