Isotonic intravenous maintenance fluid reduces hospital acquired hyponatremia in young children with central nervous system infections
- PMID: 24830423
- DOI: 10.1007/s12098-014-1436-1
Isotonic intravenous maintenance fluid reduces hospital acquired hyponatremia in young children with central nervous system infections
Abstract
Objective: To find the appropriate type of intravenous fluid (isotonic vs. hypotonic saline in 5 % dextrose) for empiric maintenance fluid therapy in children with central nervous system (CNS) infections that reduces the incidence of hospital acquired hyponatremia.
Methods: This blinded randomized controlled trial included hospitalized children aged 3 mo to 5 y with suspected CNS infections requiring intravenous maintenance fluid for at least 24 h. The subjects were randomized to receive 0.9 % saline (Group-A), 0.45 % saline (Group-B) and 0.18 % saline (Group-C) at standard maintenance rate. The outcome measures were proportion of patients developing hyponatremia (serum sodium < 135 mmol/L) after 24 h and serum sodium values at 6, 12, 18, 24 h of receiving maintenance fluids.
Results: Of the 92 patients enrolled, 31, 30 and 31 patients were randomized to Group A, B and C, respectively. Majority (60.7 %) of the patients in Group-C developed hyponatremia compared with 7.1 % of the children in Group-A and 46.1 % in Group-B. During first 24 h of fluid administration successive fall in the serum sodium values was observed in patients receiving hypotonic fluids. The risk of developing hyponatremia was nearly 6½ (95 % confidence interval (CI) 1.6-26) to 8.5 (95 % CI 2.16-33.39) times more in patients who received hypotonic saline compared to those who received isotonic saline.
Conclusions: Administration of 0.9 % saline in 5 % dextrose as intravenous maintenance fluid in children with CNS infection leads to significantly less incidence of hyponatremia when compared to that with hypotonic fluids.
Comment in
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Maintenance intravenous fluids for children with central nervous system infections.Indian J Pediatr. 2015 Jan;82(1):1-2. doi: 10.1007/s12098-014-1636-8. Epub 2014 Dec 13. Indian J Pediatr. 2015. PMID: 25502796 No abstract available.
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