Aim: Individualized, goal-directed fluid therapy (GDFT), based on Doppler measurements of stroke volume, has been proposed as a treatment strategy in terms of reducing complications, mortality and length of hospital stay in major bowel surgery. We studied the effect of Doppler-guided GDFT on intestinal damage as compared with standard postoperative fluid replacement.
Method: Patients undergoing elective colorectal resection for malignancy were randomized either to standard intra- and postoperative fluid therapy or to standard fluid therapy with additional Doppler-guided GDFT. The primary outcome was intestinal epithelial cell damage measured by plasma levels of intestinal fatty acid-binding protein (I-FABP). Global gastrointestinal perfusion was measured by gastric tonometry, expressed as regional (gastric) minus arterial CO2 -gap (Pr-a CO2 -gap).
Results: I-FABP levels were not significantly different between the intervention group and the control group (respectively, 440.8 (251.6) pg/ml and 522.4 (759.9) pg/ml, P = 0.67). Mean areas under the curve (AUCs) of intra-operative Pr-a CO2 -gaps were significantly lower in the intervention group than in the control group (P = 0.01), indicating better global gastrointestinal perfusion in the intervention group. Moreover, the mean intra-operative Pr-a CO2 -gap peak in the intervention group was 0.5 (1.0) kPa, which was significantly lower than the mean peak in the control group, of 1.4 (1.4) kPa (P = 0.03).
Conclusion: Doppler-guided GDFT during and in the first hours after elective colorectal surgery for malignancy increases global gastrointestinal perfusion, as measured by Pr-a CO2 -gap.
Keywords: Fluid therapy; colorectal surgery; intestinal fatty acid-binding protein; perfusion.
Colorectal Disease © 2017 The Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland.