Right Ventriculo-Arterial Coupling During Fluid Loading in ICU Patients
Summary
NIH registered observational study NCT07537621 examining right ventriculo-arterial coupling during fluid loading in ICU patients. The study investigates the relationship between preload responsiveness, venous congestion, and right ventricular function in critically ill patients with shock and right ventricular dysfunction. Echocardiography will be used as the primary intervention to assess hemodynamic changes.
What changed
NIH registered a new observational clinical study (NCT07537621) titled 'Right Ventriculo-Arterial Coupling During Fluid Loading in ICU Patients' on ClinicalTrials.gov. The study examines how fluid loading affects right ventricle-arterial coupling in critically ill ICU patients, investigating preload responsiveness and venous congestion as independent factors. Primary conditions include Shock, Right Ventricular Dysfunction, and Venous Congestion, with Echocardiography as the intervention.
Affected parties include ICU clinicians, critical care researchers, and healthcare institutions conducting hemodynamic research. This study registration provides no compliance obligations but offers insight into emerging hemodynamic management strategies that may influence future clinical practice guidelines for fluid tolerance assessment in critically ill patients.
Archived snapshot
Apr 17, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Right Ventriculo-Arterial Coupling During Fluid Loading in ICU Patients
Observational NCT07537621 Kind: OBSERVATIONAL Apr 17, 2026
Abstract
Preload responsiveness and venous congestion have largely been investigated independently in recent literature. However, recent data report a similar incidence of venous congestion regardless of fluid responsiveness status, challenging the concept of a linear continuum between preload independence and fluid intolerance. These findings support the need for a more individualized hemodynamic management strategy that takes venous congestion risk into account.
The right ventricle plays a central role in this framework. Its function is to maintain an adequate venous return pressure gradient to ensure cardiac output while limiting upstream venous congestion, under strong dependence on its afterload. In physiological conditions, the right ventricle adapts to changes in afterload by increasing contractility to preserve right ventriculo-arterial coupling and optimize its performance.
In chronic cardiopulmonary diseases, right ventriculo-arterial uncoupling is a well-established prognostic factor, including the presence of occult uncoupling revealed by fluid loading. In critically ill patients, right ventricular systolic dysfunction associated with venous congestion-defining right heart failure-is strongly associated with increased mortality, as is right ventriculo-arterial uncoupling itself.
To support the concept of fluid tolerance, the investigators hypothesize that impairment of right ventriculo-arterial coupling may exist or occur during fluid loading in critically ill patien...
Conditions: Shock, Right Ventricular Dysfunction, Venous Congestion
Interventions: Echography
Related changes
Get daily alerts for ClinicalTrials.gov Studies
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Source
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from NIH.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when ClinicalTrials.gov Studies publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.