Chart — Renal
Fluid Volume Excess vs Deficit Chart
Side-by-side comparison of fluid volume excess (hypervolemia) and fluid volume deficit (hypovolemia) — assessment findings, laboratory values, and nursing interventions with clinical significance.
Source: Clinical practice standards; nursing fundamentals textbooks; KDIGO guidelines; critical care nursing references. Verify with institutional protocols.
Educational use only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Key teaching point: Daily weight is the MOST objective and reliable measure of fluid balance — 1 kg ≈ 1 L fluid. Vital signs alone are insufficient; always combine weight, I&O, physical exam, and labs.
Fluid Volume Excess (FVE)
Hypervolemia · Too much fluid retained · Weight gain
Fluid Volume Deficit (FVD)
Hypovolemia · Insufficient fluid · Weight loss
Assessment Findings
| Assessment Finding | Excess (FVE) | Deficit (FVD) | Nursing Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weight | Rapid gain (>1 kg/day = significant; >2 kg/day = urgent) | Rapid loss | 1 kg ≈ 1 L fluid. Most objective fluid balance measure — use same scale, same time, same clothing. |
| Blood pressure | Hypertension; widened pulse pressure; bounding pulse | Hypotension; orthostatic hypotension; narrowed pulse pressure; weak, thready pulse | Orthostatic hypotension (drop ≥20 mmHg systolic on standing) is a reliable FVD indicator. |
| Heart rate | Tachycardia (compensatory) | Tachycardia (FIRST compensatory sign of FVD — precedes BP drop) | Tachycardia in FVD precedes hypotension. A normal BP with tachycardia = still losing fluid. |
| Jugular venous pressure | Jugular venous distension (JVD) — neck veins distended at 45° | Flat jugular veins | JVD assessment: patient at 45° head of bed. Visible pulsation above clavicle = elevated JVP = FVE. |
| Lung sounds | Crackles (rales) — fluid in alveoli; wheezes possible | Clear — no fluid in lungs | Crackles = pulmonary edema. Report new crackles immediately in any at-risk patient. |
| Breathing | Dyspnea, orthopnea (SOB lying flat), increased respiratory rate | Normal respirations (unless severe hypovolemic shock) | Orthopnea = cardinal sign of fluid overload / heart failure — ask about how many pillows they sleep with. |
| Peripheral edema | Pitting edema (1+ to 4+); sacral edema in bedridden patients | Absent; skin tenting/poor turgor | Pitting edema grading: 1+ (2mm), 2+ (4mm), 3+ (6mm), 4+ (8mm). Document location and depth. |
| Skin turgor | Taut, edematous skin | Decreased (skin tents when pinched — returns slowly) | Test over sternum or inner forearm. Tenting = poor turgor. Less reliable in elderly (normal skin laxity). |
| Mucous membranes | Moist (normal or excessive moisture) | Dry, sticky, pasty mucous membranes; dry tongue | Dry mucous membranes = reliable hydration assessment finding even in elderly patients. |
| Urine output | Variable — may be decreased despite fluid overload (renal failure etiology) | Oliguria (<0.5 mL/kg/hr); concentrated, dark urine | FVD oliguria = prerenal pattern. Urine is dark amber, strong odor, high specific gravity. |
| Mental status | Confusion in severe hypervolemia or sodium changes | Anxiety → restlessness → confusion → lethargy in progressive FVD | Any change in mental status in fluid-imbalanced patient requires reassessment of fluid status. |
| Capillary refill | Normal to brisk | >3 seconds (sluggish) — poor peripheral perfusion | Press nail bed 5 seconds. Normal: color returns in <2 seconds. Sluggish CRT = vasoconstriction/volume depletion. |
Laboratory Findings
| Lab Value | Excess (FVE) | Deficit (FVD) | Nursing Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hematocrit (Hct) | Decreased (hemodilution — blood diluted with excess fluid) | Increased (hemoconcentration — RBCs concentrated as plasma volume falls) | FVE: Hct falls. FVD: Hct rises. Neither reflects true RBC changes — it is a plasma volume effect. |
| Serum sodium (Na⁺) | Normal or decreased (dilutional hyponatremia — water retained proportionally more) | Normal or increased (hemoconcentration) | Dilutional hyponatremia: normal body sodium + excess water. Different from true hyponatremia (sodium depleted). |
| BUN | Normal or decreased (dilution) | Elevated (hemoconcentration + prerenal — decreased perfusion) | BUN rising faster than creatinine = hemoconcentration or increased urea production (GI bleed, catabolic state). |
| Serum creatinine | Normal or decreased | Elevated (prerenal azotemia — decreased GFR from hypoperfusion) | FVD → decreased renal perfusion → GFR falls → creatinine rises. Normalize with fluid resuscitation if prerenal. |
| BUN:Creatinine ratio | Normal (~10–20:1) | >20:1 (classic prerenal pattern — kidneys retaining urea) | BUN:Cr >20:1 = prerenal (FVD) until proven otherwise on NCLEX. |
| Urine specific gravity | Decreased (<1.010) — dilute urine; kidneys attempting to excrete excess fluid | Increased (>1.020 or >1.030) — concentrated urine; kidneys retaining water | Fixed 1.010 regardless of hydration = tubular damage (cannot concentrate or dilute = isosthenuria/ATN). |
| Serum osmolality | Decreased (<275 mOsm/kg) | Increased (>295 mOsm/kg) | Normal: 280–295 mOsm/kg. Calculated: 2(Na) + glucose/18 + BUN/2.8. Elevated = dehydration/hyperosmolality. |
| Albumin | Decreased (dilutional) or normal | Elevated if hemoconcentrated; decreased if malnutrition underlies FVD | Low albumin causes FVE by reducing oncotic pressure — fluid leaks from vascular to interstitial space. |
Nursing Interventions
| Intervention | Excess (FVE) | Deficit (FVD) | Nursing Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positioning | Semi-Fowler to high Fowler (30–90°) — improves breathing, reduces preload | Supine or Trendelenburg (legs elevated) — improves cerebral and cardiac perfusion | Position change is the most immediate non-pharmacologic nursing action. |
| Fluid management | Fluid restriction (document all intake carefully: IV, PO, tube feeds, flushes) | IV fluid resuscitation (NS, LR) or oral hydration if tolerated | IV fluid type determined by cause and electrolyte status — NS for isotonic deficit; D5W for free water deficit. |
| Diet | Low sodium diet; phosphorus/potassium restriction if renal failure | Encourage oral fluids and foods with high water content | Sodium restriction reduces osmotic pull of fluid into vasculature — reduces edema formation. |
| Medications | Diuretics (furosemide — loop); monitor K⁺ (hypokalemia risk) | IV fluid bolus per order; consider vasopressors if refractory shock | Furosemide: monitor K⁺, Na⁺, and urine output response. Report no response within 1–2 hours. |
| Monitoring | Daily weights; lung sounds; peripheral edema grading; urine output; BMP | Hourly urine output; serial vital signs; orthostatic BP; mucous membranes; BMP | Daily weight is most objective fluid assessment. 1 kg = 1 L fluid. Trend over days. |
| Fall prevention | Standard precautions (diuretic use increases fall risk) | HIGH fall risk — orthostatic hypotension; dangle before standing; assist with ambulation | FVD orthostatic hypotension is a leading cause of in-hospital falls. Always assist and educate. |
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with Clinical practice standards; KDIGO guidelines; Critical care nursing references. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
