Hypovolaemia: absence of postural change in vital signs did not exclude moderate blood loss.
|
|
|
Clinical bottom line (level 2a)
-
Patients who had a postural pulse rise of more than 30 beats/minute or severe postural dizziness were likely to have lost at least 450 ml of blood
(LR+11)
.
-
Patients with supine hypotension (systolic < 95 mmHg) were more likely to have lost at least 450 ml of blood
(LR+4.3)
.
-
Postural hypotension (> 20 mmHg decrease in systolic blood pressure) did not usefully diagnose or exclude blood loss of at least 450 ml.
-
Absence of postural changes did not exclude blood loss of at least 450 ml.
|
|
McGee et al:
Journal of the American Medical Association
1999;
281 (11):
1022-1029
|
Expires
October 2003
|
The study
Systematic review of all articles
of
- Patients: suspected hypovolaemia
- Intervention: clinical features
- Outcome: hypovolaemia
Articles found in English
using Medline, 1966 to 1997
(search terms: 3 search strategies based on dehydration, hypotension, orthostatic, heart rate, tilt-table test
)
and reviewing bibliographies of retrieved articles and textbooks on physical diagnosis.
Selection criteria: see above
Appraisal criteria: graded using set criteria by 2 independent reviewers
Articles excluded if: - studies on children or infants
9 studies of normovolaemic patients who had phlebotomy of 500 - 1000 ml.
Studies were not tested for homogeneity - a random effects model was used to combine data.
The evidence
| diagnostic test |
number of patients |
sensitivity for acute moderate blood loss (450 to 630 ml)
(95% CI) |
specificity for acute moderate blood loss (450 to 630 ml)
(95% CI) |
LR+ |
LR- |
| postural pulse increment more than 30 beat/min or severe postural dizziness on standing from supine |
- |
22%
(6% to
48%)
|
98%
(97% to
99%)
|
11
|
0.80
|
| postural hypotension if aged > 65 (> 20 mmHg in systolic blood pressure) |
- |
27%
(14% to
40%)
|
86%
(76% to
97%)
|
1.9
|
0.85
|
| postural hypotension if aged 65 or less |
- |
9%
(6% to
12%)
|
94%
(84% to
99%)
|
1.5
|
0.97
|
| supine tachycardia (pulse > 100 beats/min) |
- |
0%
(0% to
42%)
|
96%
(88% to
99%)
|
-
|
1.0
|
| supine hypotension (systolic blood pressure < 95 mmHg) |
- |
13%
(0% to
50%)
|
97%
(90% to
100%)
|
4.3
|
0.90
|
| total |
|
- 25 studies were found that reported postural changes in vital signs in normovolaemic adults. The mean changes noted were
- pulse increase: 10 beats/min (95% CI: 9 to 13)
- fall in systolic blood pressure: 4 mmHg (95% CI: 2 to 6)
- rise in diastolic blood pressure: 5 mmHg (95% CI: 3 to 8)
These changes stabilised after 45 to 60 seconds standing upright.
- Neither mild or moderate postural dizziness nor use of cardiovascular or psychotropic medication was associated with postural hypotension.
- Postural changes were noted to last 12 to 72 hours following haemorrhage.
- Capillary refill time was not found usefully to diagnose or exclude acute blood loss.
Comments
- By limiting the search strategy to only Medline and English language articles, potentially useful material may have been missed.
- In cases where blood loss is suspected, signs which rule out bleeding are clinically more important than those which diagnose bleeding
- A problem with applicability is that the studied population has been healthy volunteers; the presence of comorbidity may greatly reduce the usefulness of the test, since it would mainly reduce specificity.
Citation
-
McGee
S,
Abernethy
WB,
Simel
DL:
Is this patient hypovolemic?.
Journal of the American Medical Association
1999;
281 (11):
1022-1029
Search Terms:
hand-search
Contributor: Chris Ball and Clare Wotton,
October 1999
Reviewer: Luis Ruiz Del Fresno
Clinical Question.
| Patient |
suspected hypovolaemia or acute blood loss |
| Intervention or Exposure |
clinical findings; capillary refill, mucous membranes, postural hypotension, pulse |
| Outcome |
hypovolaemia or acute blood loss |
|
|