Guide — Renal
Fluid Volume Excess vs Deficit
Fluid imbalances are among the most common and critical nursing priorities. Accurate assessment and rapid intervention for both hypervolemia and hypovolemia prevent organ damage and reduce mortality.
10 min read · Renal
Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Clinical decisions require licensed professional judgment and institutional protocols. 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.
Overview
Fluid Volume Excess (FVE)
Also called hypervolemia or fluid overload. The body retains more fluid than it eliminates — extracellular fluid volume expands. Sodium and water are retained together (isotonic excess).
Key systems affected: Cardiovascular, Pulmonary, Renal
Fluid Volume Deficit (FVD)
Also called hypovolemia or dehydration. The body loses more fluid than it takes in — extracellular fluid volume contracts. Can be isotonic (equal loss of Na and water) or hypotonic (more water than Na loss).
Key systems affected: Cardiovascular, Renal, Neurological
Causes
| Fluid Volume Excess Causes | Fluid Volume Deficit Causes |
|---|---|
| Heart failure (impaired cardiac output → Na/water retention) | Hemorrhage (acute blood loss) |
| Chronic kidney disease / AKI (impaired fluid excretion) | Severe vomiting or diarrhea |
| Cirrhosis / liver failure (low albumin → fluid shifts to interstitium) | Diuretic overuse or excessive diuresis |
| Nephrotic syndrome (massive proteinuria → hypoalbuminemia → edema) | Inadequate fluid intake (elderly, NPO, dysphagia) |
| Excessive IV fluid administration (especially normal saline) | Fever, diaphoresis, burns (insensible fluid loss) |
| Cushing syndrome / corticosteroid excess (Na retention) | Diabetes insipidus, poorly controlled hyperglycemia (osmotic diuresis) |
| SIADH (excessive ADH → water retention) | Third-spacing: ascites, pleural effusion (fluid unavailable to circulation) |
Assessment Findings
| System | Fluid Volume Excess | Fluid Volume Deficit |
|---|---|---|
| Weight | Rapid weight gain (>1 kg/day = significant) | Rapid weight loss |
| Blood pressure | Hypertension, bounding pulse, elevated JVP | Hypotension, orthostatic hypotension, weak thready pulse |
| Heart rate | Tachycardia (compensatory) | Tachycardia (compensatory — first sign of volume depletion) |
| Pulmonary | Crackles (rales), dyspnea, orthopnea, pulmonary edema | Normal or clear lung sounds |
| Peripheral edema | Pitting edema — legs, ankles, sacrum (dependent) | Absent; skin tenting (decreased turgor) |
| Skin / mucous membranes | Skin cool and pale (if cardiac etiology) | Dry mucous membranes, poor skin turgor, sunken eyes |
| Urine output | May be decreased (oliguria) despite fluid overload | Oliguria (<0.5 mL/kg/hr), concentrated dark urine |
| Mental status | Confusion in severe cases | Anxiety, restlessness, confusion in moderate-severe FVD |
| Neck veins | Distended jugular veins (JVD) | Flat jugular veins |
Laboratory Findings
| Lab Value | Fluid Volume Excess | Fluid Volume Deficit |
|---|---|---|
| Hematocrit (Hct) | Decreased (dilution) | Increased (hemoconcentration) |
| Serum sodium | Normal or decreased (dilutional hyponatremia) | Normal or increased (hemoconcentration) |
| BUN | Normal or decreased (dilution) | Elevated (prerenal — decreased perfusion, hemoconcentration) |
| Serum creatinine | Normal or decreased | Elevated (prerenal azotemia) |
| BUN:Creatinine ratio | Normal | >20:1 (prerenal — volume depletion) |
| Urine specific gravity | Decreased (<1.010 — dilute urine) | Increased (>1.030 — concentrated urine) |
| Urine sodium | Elevated (kidneys excreting Na) | Decreased (<20 mEq/L — kidneys retaining Na) |
| Serum osmolality | Decreased (<275 mOsm/kg) | Increased (>295 mOsm/kg) |
Nursing Interventions
Fluid Volume Excess
Fluid restriction
Per provider order — document all intake carefully including IV meds
Low sodium diet
Reduces osmotic pull of water into vasculature
Diuretics
Furosemide, bumetanide — loop diuretics; monitor K⁺ (hypokalemia risk)
Semi-Fowler or high Fowler position
Improves respiratory effort and reduces preload
Daily weights
Same time, same scale — 1 kg gain = ~1 L fluid
Monitor lung sounds and O₂ saturation
Early detection of pulmonary edema
Fluid Volume Deficit
IV fluid resuscitation
NS or LR for isotonic loss; type per provider order and etiology
Oral hydration
Encourage fluids PO if patient can tolerate; monitor swallowing
Fall precautions
Orthostatic hypotension → high fall risk; dangle before standing
Urine output monitoring
Insert Foley if needed; goal ≥0.5 mL/kg/hr; report oliguria
Skin care
Turgor assessment; protect fragile dehydrated skin from breakdown
Electrolyte replacement
Replace K⁺, Na⁺ per labs — losses accompany fluid depletion
Monitoring Priorities
Daily weights (most objective fluid assessment)
Same time (morning, after voiding, before eating), same scale, same clothing. 1 kg = ~1 L fluid. Weight change >2 kg/day = significant fluid shift.
Strict intake and output (I&O)
All fluid in (IV, PO, tube feeds, flushes, irrigations) vs all output (urine, emesis, wound drains, ostomy, nasogastric). Report negative or positive balance >500 mL over 8 hours.
Vital signs trend
Orthostatic BP (supine→sitting→standing). Narrowing pulse pressure in FVD. Widened pulse pressure, bounding pulse in FVE.
Lung sounds every shift
Crackles (rales) = fluid in alveoli = pulmonary edema. Report new or worsening crackles in any patient with fluid overload risk.
Peripheral edema grading
1+ to 4+ pitting edema scale; document location (bilateral ankles, sacrum — dependent distribution).
Urine output trend
Normal: 0.5–1 mL/kg/hr (minimum 30 mL/hr in adults). Oliguria = first sign of either FVD (prerenal) or AKI. Color and concentration provide additional clues.
NCLEX Pearls
- ✦Daily weight is the MOST objective method for assessing fluid balance. 1 kg ≈ 1 L fluid.
- ✦FVD tachycardia is the FIRST compensatory response — blood pressure stays normal until significant volume is lost.
- ✦Hematocrit INCREASES in FVD (hemoconcentration) and DECREASES in FVE (hemodilution).
- ✦BUN:Creatinine ratio >20:1 = classic FVD/prerenal pattern — kidneys conserving fluid by concentrating urine.
- ✦Urine specific gravity: concentrated (>1.020) in FVD; dilute (<1.010) in FVE.
- ✦FVE position: head of bed elevated (30–45°) → reduces dyspnea and preload. FVD: Trendelenburg (legs up) → improves cerebral perfusion.
- ✦JVD (distended neck veins) = FVE. Flat neck veins = FVD.
- ✦Loop diuretics (furosemide) for FVE: monitor potassium (hypokalemia) and monitor urine output for response.
- ✦Orthostatic hypotension in FVD: assist patient to sitting then standing, never rush. High fall risk.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with KDIGO Clinical Practice Guidelines · National Kidney Foundation (NKF). 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 →
