PRISM Rounds: Pulmonary Critical Care & Sleep Podcast
This week on PRISM Rounds, we discuss ARISE FLUIDS, a pragmatic NEJM trial asking a question every ICU and emergency department team faces: after initial fluid resuscitation in septic shock, should we give more crystalloid or move earlier to vasopressors? In adults with early septic shock, restricted fluids with early vasopressors changed the process of care and was associated with less pulmonary edema, but did not improve days alive and out of the hospital at 90 days compared with a more fluid-forward strategy. We place the trial in context with prior sepsis resuscitation evidence and discuss what it means at the bedside: not reflexive liters, not reflexive pressors, but thoughtful reassessment of perfusion, fluid responsiveness, pulmonary edema risk, and shock physiology. Listeners may also want to revisit PRISM Rounds Episode 35 on choosing fluids in sepsis and Episode 40 on the PRoMPT BOLUS study for related discussions. Article: Vasopressors or Fluids in Early Septic Shock. New England Journal of Medicine. Published June 11, 2026. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2516225 [https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2516225] Tags: Critical Care, ICU, Sepsis, Septic Shock, ARISE FLUIDS, Vasopressors, Norepinephrine, IV Fluids, Fluid Resuscitation, Emergency Medicine, Pulmonary Critical Care, NEJM, Evidence Based Medicine, PRISM Rounds, Medical Podcast, FOAMed, Clinical Trials, Shock, Pulmonary Edema
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