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Dr. Brandon Varr, an advanced heart failure and transplant cardiologist, provides insight into how heart failure is managed by diuretics and whether or not fluid restriction is important.
Heart Failure (HF) Refresher
Heart Failure (HF) simple means that the heart is not pumping enough blood to adequately supply organs.
TYPES OF DIURETICS (MAIN 4):
Holding Parameters
How much do diuretics influence BP?
When are we justified in holding on diuretics?
Important Take-Aways
Think critically as to WHY your patient is here in the hospital. For example, a decompensated HF patient is in the hospital to lose weight, salt, and take aggressive diuretics to help them feel better.
If a patient is hypotensive, look at their meds and think about which medication to hold (usually NOT the diuretic). Consider adjusting BP meds before holding a diuretic.
Nurses should hold other BP meds before holding diuretics if patient is hospitalized for fluid overload
Fluid Restrictions
I&Os v. Os & Weight
I think that strict intakes are just complete waste of time, from a general telemetry floor level patient who’s getting Lasix BID and responding. What I’m more concerned with is how much urine came out that day, what was their weight yesterday and what was their weight today on the same scale standing up in the morning? Those are the most useful things to me is their overall urine output for the day and how much weight they’ve gained or lost.
By Annie4.8
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Dr. Brandon Varr, an advanced heart failure and transplant cardiologist, provides insight into how heart failure is managed by diuretics and whether or not fluid restriction is important.
Heart Failure (HF) Refresher
Heart Failure (HF) simple means that the heart is not pumping enough blood to adequately supply organs.
TYPES OF DIURETICS (MAIN 4):
Holding Parameters
How much do diuretics influence BP?
When are we justified in holding on diuretics?
Important Take-Aways
Think critically as to WHY your patient is here in the hospital. For example, a decompensated HF patient is in the hospital to lose weight, salt, and take aggressive diuretics to help them feel better.
If a patient is hypotensive, look at their meds and think about which medication to hold (usually NOT the diuretic). Consider adjusting BP meds before holding a diuretic.
Nurses should hold other BP meds before holding diuretics if patient is hospitalized for fluid overload
Fluid Restrictions
I&Os v. Os & Weight
I think that strict intakes are just complete waste of time, from a general telemetry floor level patient who’s getting Lasix BID and responding. What I’m more concerned with is how much urine came out that day, what was their weight yesterday and what was their weight today on the same scale standing up in the morning? Those are the most useful things to me is their overall urine output for the day and how much weight they’ve gained or lost.
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