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Apex Nursing

Reference — Renal · Med-Surg

Fluid Balance Assessment Reference

Comprehensive fluid balance assessment — intake and output components with measurement techniques, insensible loss estimation, daily weight interpretation, edema grading scale, laboratory markers for volume status, hemodynamic correlates, and hypervolemia vs hypovolemia differentiation.

Reference · Renal · Med-Surg

Educational use only. Fluid management decisions are provider-directed and patient-specific. I&O documentation accuracy depends on thorough nursing assessment. 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.

Daily Weight — Primary Fluid Monitor

1 kg weight change = ~1 L fluidThe most reliable indicator of overall fluid balance. Fat gain/loss is too slow to cause rapid weight changes — acute weight changes (overnight) = fluid shifts.
Standardized techniqueSame scale, same time (usually 0600 after first void, before breakfast), same amount of clothing/linen. Calibrate scale regularly.
Report thresholdWeight gain of > 1 kg in 24h or > 2 kg in 48h should typically be reported in patients with CHF, renal failure, cirrhosis, or post-operatively. Confirm with provider's parameters in nursing orders.
vs I&ODaily weight is more accurate than cumulative I&O (I&O misses insensible losses and estimation errors). Use both — I&O for trending sources and sinks, weight for overall fluid burden.

Insensible Losses

RouteBaseline VolumeIncreases With
Skin (perspiration)300–400 mL/day (at rest, normal temperature)Fever (+10% per degree Celsius above 37°C), exercise, burns, hot environments
Lungs (respiration)300–400 mL/dayTachypnea, hyperventilation, mechanical ventilation (without humidification), high altitude
Total insensible600–900 mL/day (typical)In burns, fever, or diaphoresis: up to 2000–3000+ mL/day
Fever adjustmentAdd ~200 mL/day per degree C above 37°CPatient with 40°C fever: ~600 mL/day additional insensible loss

Intake Components

SourceExamplesDocumentation Notes
Oral fluidsWater, juice, milk, coffee, tea, soups, ice chips (count as 50% liquid volume)Only include oral intake that patient actually consumed — chart actual, not offered
IV fluidsNS, LR, D5W, D5NS, D5LR, albumin, blood productsInclude continuous infusions, piggybacks, and IV push flush volumes (typically 10–30 mL/flush)
IV medicationsAntibiotics in NS/D5W, vasopressors in NS, TPNAntibiotic bags typically 50–250 mL; include all IV medication volume
Enteral nutritionNasogastric tube feeds, gastrostomy (G-tube), jejunostomy (J-tube)Include rate × hours administered; include free water flushes
Blood productsPRBCs (250–350 mL), FFP (~200–250 mL), platelets (~200–300 mL), cryoprecipitate (~15 mL/unit)Document each unit volume separately; typical PRBC = 350 mL, platelets = 250 mL
Irrigation fluids (retained)Bladder irrigation (only retained volume), wound irrigationCount only retained volume: Total bladder irrigant in − drainage out − expected urine = retained amount

Output Components

SourceMeasurementNormal AmountNotes
UrineFoley catheter: hourly; straight cath: volume at time. Incontinent: estimate pads/weight (1g = 1mL)Adult: 0.5–1 mL/kg/hr; ~ 1500–2000 mL/dayOliguria: < 0.5 mL/kg/hr. Anuria: < 100 mL/day. Report sustained oliguria to provider.
StoolEstimate solid stool (100–200 mL) or measure liquid stool; weigh pads if unable to measureFormed stool: estimate 100–200 mL/day; liquid diarrhea: may be 500–2000+ mL/dayProfuse diarrhea causes significant fluid and electrolyte loss — meticulous measurement important.
EmesisMeasure in a graduated container; estimate if unable (large/small/moderate)None expected normallyDocument color, amount, and character. Bile-stained = small bowel obstruction. Coffee-grounds or bright red = GI bleeding.
NG/OG suctionMeasure gastric output from canister (subtract any irrigant instilled)None expected normally; drainage 200–500 mL/day post-opHigh NG output → metabolic alkalosis (HCl loss), hypokalemia, hypovolemia. Replace electrolytes.
Wound drainageJackson-Pratt/Blake drain: measure and chart separately. Dressing saturations: small/mod/large/soakedVaries by procedure and time post-opSignificant wound output should be measured, not estimated. Document color and consistency.
Chest tube drainageHourly measurement from pleur-evac system< 100 mL/hr expected after cardiac surgery; > 200 mL/hr = excessiveSudden cessation of drainage may indicate clotted tubing — do NOT strip/clamp without provider order.
Paracentesis/thoracentesisMeasure fluid removed during procedureN/A — procedure-dependentLarge-volume paracentesis (> 5L): albumin infusion often ordered (6–8 g/L removed) to prevent circulatory dysfunction.

Edema Grading Scale (Pitting)

GradePit Depth / ReboundAppearanceExamples
1+Slight pit (2 mm), rebounds immediately (< 2 sec)Barely detectable pittingMild ankle edema at end of day
2+Moderate pit (4 mm), rebounds within 15 secondsAnkle and shin edema, relatively normal leg contourModerate ankle/shin bilateral dependent edema
3+Deep pit (6 mm), rebounds in 15–30 secondsFull leg edema, leg appears swollenFull leg edema; may extend to knee
4+Very deep pit (8 mm), rebounds > 30 seconds or no reboundSevere, brawny (non-pitting), entire limb affectedMassive edema; anasarca; thickened, indurated skin

Assess over bony prominences: medial malleolus (ankle), tibial shaft, pre-tibial area, sacrum (bedbound patients). Document location, bilateral vs unilateral, pitting vs non-pitting.

Laboratory Markers for Volume Status

LabNormalHypovolemiaHypervolemiaNotes
BUN:Creatinine ratio10:1 to 20:1ELEVATED — > 20:1 (BUN rises faster than Cr from increased tubular reabsorption with ADH)Normal or lowDehydration: BUN:Cr > 20:1. GI bleeding also elevates BUN (protein catabolism from blood in gut).
Serum osmolality275–295 mOsm/kgELEVATED — > 295 mOsm/kg (concentrated blood from water deficit)Low — < 275 mOsm/kg if hypotonic fluid overloadCalculated: 2(Na) + BUN/2.8 + glucose/18. Osmole gap > 10 = possible toxic alcohol.
Serum sodium135–145 mEq/LHypernatremia (> 145) with pure water deficit; hyponatremia if lost more Na+ than waterHyponatremia (< 135) with dilutional hypervolemia (CHF, cirrhosis, SIADH)Sodium reflects water balance, not total body sodium.
Urine specific gravity1.003–1.030HIGH — > 1.025 (kidneys concentrating urine, retaining water)LOW — 1.001–1.010 (kidneys excreting dilute urine)Diabetes insipidus: specific gravity ~ 1.001–1.003 despite hypernatremia.
Hematocrit37–52% (varies by sex)ELEVATED — hemoconcentration (all red cells, less plasma)LOW — hemodilution (plasma volume expanded, cells same)Acute hemorrhage: Hct may appear normal initially (all components lost proportionately).
Serum albumin3.5–5.0 g/dLElevated (hemoconcentration)Low (dilution or poor nutrition/liver disease causing third-spacing edema)Albumin < 2.5 g/dL → decreased oncotic pressure → edema even with hypovolemia (third-spacing).
Urine sodiumVariesLOW — < 20 mEq/L (kidneys avidly retaining sodium — FENa < 1%)HIGH — > 40 mEq/L (kidneys excreting excess sodium)FENa = (urine Na × plasma Cr) / (plasma Na × urine Cr) × 100. FENa < 1% = prerenal.
Lactate< 2 mmol/LELEVATED if tissue hypoperfusion from volume depletion (> 2 = concern; > 4 = critical)Normal unless venous congestion causing organ hypoperfusion (CHF)Lactate is a tissue perfusion marker, not a direct fluid marker — but hypovolemic shock → elevated lactate.

Clinical Signs: Hypovolemia vs Hypervolemia

AssessmentHypovolemia (Fluid Deficit)Hypervolemia (Fluid Excess)
Blood pressureHypotension; orthostatic changes (>20 mmHg drop standing)Hypertension; elevated JVP
Heart rateTachycardia (compensatory)Normal or elevated (from CHF)
Skin/mucous membranesDry mucous membranes, poor skin turgor, dry axillaeEdema, brawny skin, sacral edema (bedbound)
Urine outputOliguria (< 0.5 mL/kg/hr); dark amber concentrated urineAdequate to increased; pale dilute urine
LungsClear to auscultationCrackles (rales) — especially basal; dyspnea; decreased SpO₂
WeightAcute weight loss (> 2% body weight = clinically significant dehydration)Acute weight gain; > 1 kg/day = significant fluid retention
NeurologicalConfusion, weakness, dizziness (especially with position change)Anxiety, confusion if hypoxic from pulmonary edema

NCLEX Pearls

Daily weight is the most accurate way to monitor fluid balance. 1 kg = ~1 L fluid. Acute weight changes = fluid, not fat.

Same scale, same time, same clothing — inconsistent technique makes weight meaningless.

BUN:Cr > 20:1 = dehydration or prerenal AKI (or GI bleed). Kidneys concentrating and retaining sodium.

High urine specific gravity (> 1.025) = concentrated = dehydrated. Low specific gravity (1.001–1.010) = dilute = overhydrated or diabetes insipidus.

Insensible losses = ~600–900 mL/day and are NOT captured in urine output. Always factor into total fluid assessment.

Oliguria = < 0.5 mL/kg/hr (about 30–35 mL/hr for a 70kg adult). Sustained oliguria must be reported.

Crackles + weight gain + edema = fluid excess. Dry mucous membranes + tachycardia + oliguria = fluid deficit.

Ice chips: count as 50% of volume (e.g., 100 mL of ice chips = 50 mL intake).

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This 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 →