Literature DB >> 20875195

Improving peri-operative fluid management in a large teaching hospital: pragmatic studies on the effects of changing practice.

A N De Silva1, T Scibelli, E Itobi, P Austin, M Abu-Hilal, S A Wootton, M A Stroud.   

Abstract

Concerns about the over-prescription of peri-operative fluids, particularly normal saline, culminated in the recent publication of UK national guidelines on fluid prescription during and after surgery. A working group comprising members of the nutrition support team, surgeons, anaesthetists and pharmacists therefore sought to reduce the overall levels of fluid prescription and to limit normal saline usage in our large Teaching Hospital by producing written local fluid prescribing guidelines and holding a series of fluid prescription education sessions for consultants and junior staff. Ideally, the success of such measures would have been determined by studies on fluid balance, body weight and/or measured body water in large numbers of individual patients in a large cluster-randomised controlled trial. However, this would have proved logistically difficult and very costly especially as it is notoriously difficult to rely on the accuracy of daily fluid balance charts in large numbers of patients on busy post-operative surgical wards. We therefore undertook a pragmatic study, comparing historical data on fluid type/volume prescribed (from both individual and ward level pharmacy records), oedema status and clinical outcomes from 2002 with two prospective audits of similar data carried out during 2008 and 2009. Our data showed that in the comparable, elective surgical patients within each audit, there was a decline in total intravenous fluids prescribed over the first 5 post-operative days from 21·1 litres per patient in 2002 to 14·2 litres per patient in 2009 (P<0·05), while pharmacy records showed that the proportion of 0·9% saline supplied declined from 60% to 35% of all fluids supplied to the surgical wards involved, with a concomitant increase in the use of 4%/0·18% dextrose-saline and Hartmann's solution. Alongside these changes in fluid prescribing, the number of patients with clinically apparent oedema declined from 53% in 2002 to 36% in 2009; gut function returned more quickly (6 d in 2002 v. 4 d in 2009, P<0·05) and the length of stay improved from 13 d in 2002 to 10 d in 2009, P<0·05). Although we accept that other factors might have contributed to the observed changes in these clinical parameters, we believe that the measures to reduce fluid and saline administration were the major contributors to these improved clinical outcomes.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20875195     DOI: 10.1017/S0029665110003824

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Nutr Soc        ISSN: 0029-6651            Impact factor:   6.297


  9 in total

1.  Oedema is associated with clinical outcome following emergency abdominal surgery.

Authors:  P G Vaughan-Shaw; J Saunders; T Smith; A T King; M A Stroud
Journal:  Ann R Coll Surg Engl       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 1.891

Review 2.  Intravenous Fluid Therapy in Traumatic Brain Injury and Decompressive Craniectomy.

Authors:  Hernando Raphael Alvis-Miranda; Sandra Milena Castellar-Leones; Luis Rafael Moscote-Salazar
Journal:  Bull Emerg Trauma       Date:  2014-01

3.  Fluid management knowledge in hospital physicians: 'Greenshoots' of improvement but still a cause for concern.

Authors:  Richard Leach; Siobhan Crichton; Neil Morton; Marc Leach; Marlies Ostermann
Journal:  Clin Med (Lond)       Date:  2020-05       Impact factor: 2.659

4.  Fluid therapy in neurotrauma: basic and clinical concepts.

Authors:  Hernando Raphael Alvis-Miranda; Andres M Rubiano; Juan C Puyana; Gabriel Alcala-Cerra; Luis Rafael Moscote-Salazar
Journal:  Rev Health Care       Date:  2014

5.  Perioperative intravenous fluid prescribing: a multi-centre audit.

Authors:  Benjamin Harris; Christian Schopflin; Clare Khaghani; Mark Edwards
Journal:  Perioper Med (Lond)       Date:  2015-12-18

6.  Pharmacist intervention to enhance postoperative fluid prescribing practice in an Iraqi hospital through implementation of NICE guideline.

Authors:  Sarah K Abbood; Hayder C Assad; Ali A Al-Jumaili
Journal:  Pharm Pract (Granada)       Date:  2019-08-29

7.  Undergraduate medical textbooks do not provide adequate information on intravenous fluid therapy: a systematic survey and suggestions for improvement.

Authors:  Arfon G M T Powell; Simon Paterson-Brown; Gordon B Drummond
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2014-02-20       Impact factor: 2.463

Review 8.  Learning to prescribe intravenous fluids: A scoping review.

Authors:  Richard F R McCrory; Gerard Joseph Gormley; Alexander Peter Maxwell; Tim Dornan
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2017-12

9.  Introducing NICE guidelines for intravenous fluid therapy into a district general hospital.

Authors:  Marcia McDougall; Bruce Guthrie; Arthur Doyle; Alan Timmins; Meghan Bateson; Emily Ridley; Gordon Drummond; Thenmalar Vadiveloo
Journal:  BMJ Open Qual       Date:  2022-02
  9 in total

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