| Literature DB >> 29527518 |
Abstract
The survival of a child with severe volume depletion at the emergency department depends on the competency of the first responder to recognize and promptly treat hypovolemic shock. Although the basic principles on fluid and electrolytes therapy have been investigated for decades, the topic remains a challenge, as consensus on clinical management protocol is difficult to reach, and more adverse events are reported from fluid administration than for any other drug. While the old principles proposed by Holliday and Segar, and Finberg have stood the test of time, recent systematic reviews and meta-analyses have highlighted the risk of hyponatraemia, and hyponatraemic encephalopathy in some children treated with hypotonic fluids. In the midst of conflicting literature on fluid and electrolytes therapy, it would appear that isotonic fluids are best suitable for the correction of hypotonic, isonatraemic, and hypernatraemic dehydration. Although oral rehydration therapy is adequate to correct mild to moderate isonatraemic dehydration, parenteral fluid therapy is safer for the child with severe dehydration and those with changes in serum sodium. The article reviews the pathophysiology of water and sodium metabolism and, it uses the clinical case examples to illustrate the bed-side approach to the management of three different types of dehydration using a pre-mixed isotonic fluid solution (with 20 or 40 mmol/L of potassium chloride added depending on the absence or presence of hypokalemia, respectively). When 3% sodium chloride is unavailable to treat hyponatraemic encephalopathy, 0.9% sodium chloride becomes inevitable, albeit, a closer monitoring of serum sodium is required. The importance of a keen and regular clinical and laboratory monitoring of a child being rehydrated is emphasized. The article would be valuable to clinicians in less-developed countries, who must use pre-mixed fluids, and who often cannot get some suitable rehydrating solutions.Entities:
Keywords: childhood; dehydration; hypernatraemia; hyponatraemia; hypovolaemia; isonatraemia; management
Year: 2018 PMID: 29527518 PMCID: PMC5829087 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2018.00028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Causes of acute and chronic or persistent diarrheal disorders (32).
| Types | Examples |
|---|---|
| Acute diarrhea | Infections Drugs or poisons Immediate onset hypersensitivity reactions |
| Chronic or persistent diarrhea | Infections with parasites such as cryptosporidium and giardia Other infections, usually in the presence of specific risk factors such as malnutrition, immune deficiency (including HIV, post measles), associated illnesses (pneumonia, urinary tract infections), or mucosal injury Congenital disorders of digestion and absorption including: Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (e.g., cystic fibrosis); enteropathies (celiac disease, food allergies, autoimmune disorders); specific enzyme defects (sucrase-isomaltase deficiency); transport defects (glucose-galactose transporter); and congenital intractable diarrhea (microvillous inclusion disease, tufting enteropathy) Short gut syndrome (bowel resection after necrotisingenterocolitis) |
Average electrolyte content of stool in acute watery diarrhea (37).
| Diarrheal by etiology | Sodium mmol/L | Potassium mmol/L | Chloride mmol/L | Bicarbonate mmol/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children below 5 years | 101 | 27 | 92 | 32 |
| Children below 5 years | 56 | 25 | 55 | 14 |
Figure 1The total water distribution in a 12-month-old child.
Average solute concentrations in intracellular and extracellular compartments (35).
| Intracellular fluid (mmol/L) | Extracellular fluid (mmol/L) | |
|---|---|---|
| Cations | Potassium (140) | Sodium (140) |
| Anions | Organic phosphate (107) | Chloride (104) |
Osmoregulation and volume regulation of extracellular fluid volume (16, 34).
| Osmoregulation | Volume regulation | |
|---|---|---|
| What is sensed | Plasma osmolality | Effective circulating volume affected by volume depletion and/or dehydration |
| Sensors | Supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus | Cardiopulmonary baroreceptors located in the atria, ventricles and pulmonary interstitium |
| Effectors | Arginine vasopressin | Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone |
| What is effected | Urine osmolality | Urinary sodium |
Figure 2Renin-aldosterone pathways (16, 34). PRT, proximal renal tubles; DRT, distal renal tubles; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; ECF, extracellular volume.
Other non-diarrheal causes, and clinical classes of hyponatraemia (16, 34, 41).
| Clinical type | Common causes | Mechanisms of hyponatraemia |
|---|---|---|
| Euvolaemia | Syndrome of inappropriate secretion of anti-diuretic hormone (SIADH)
Central nervous system (CNS); infections, trauma, surgery, shunts, hypoxic ischemia Pulmonary; pneumonia, effusions, positive pressure ventilation, asthma, tumors Drugs; carbamazepine, vinca alkaloids, narcotics, aspirin, ecstasy, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors Tumors; leukemia, lymphoma, Neuroblastoma Adrenal insufficiency CNS disease Pulmonary disease Increased water intake; dilute infant formula, polydipsia, near drowning, iatrogenic hypotonic fluid administration | Impaired water excretion (1–4 of the common causes) Increased sodium losses (2, under common causes) Increased water intake (5, under common causes) |
| Hypervolemia | SIADH Acute/chronic renal failure Nephrotic syndrome Liver cirrhosis | Impaired water excretion (1–4 of the common causes) Increased sodium losses (2 of the common causes) |
| Hypovolemia | Diarrhea Vomiting Burns Pancreatitis Diuretics Ostomy output Heat stroke Renal tubular acidosis Cerebral salt wasting | Increased sodium losses (1–9 of the common causes) |
Holliday and Segar estimation of maintenance fluid (adapted).
| Body weight categories | Estimated daily maintenance fluid volume | Estimated fluid rate per hour |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 10 kg | 100 calories/kg/day or 100 ml/kg/day | 4 ml/kg/h |
| 10–20 kg | 1,000 calories + 50 calories/kg/day or 1000 ml + 50 ml/kg/day for each kg over 10 kg | 2 ml/kg/h |
| >20 kg | 1,500 calories + 20 calories/kg/day or 1,500 ml + 20 ml/kg/day for each kg over 20 kg | 1 ml/kg/h |
Some examples of hypotonic, isotonic, and hypertonic fluids (16, 44).
| Fluid | Na (mmol/L) | Cl (mmol/L) | K (mmol/L) | Ca (mmol/L) | Mg (mmol/L) | Glucose (g/L) | Lactate (mmol/L) | Acetate (mmol/L) | Gluconate (mmol/L) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypotonic | |||||||||
| 0.18% NaCl | 31 | 31 | |||||||
| 0.45% NaCl | 77 | 77 | – | – | – | ||||
| Isotonic | |||||||||
| 0.9% NaCl | 154 | 154 | |||||||
| 0.9% NaCl with 5% glucose | 154 | 154 | 50 | ||||||
| 0.9% NaCl with 5% glucose with 20 mmol/L of KCl | 154 | 174 | 20 | 50 | |||||
| Plasmalyte 148 solution | 140 | 98 | 5 | 3 | – | 28 | 23 | ||
| Hartmann’s solution | 131 | 111 | 4 | 2 | 29 | ||||
| Ringer’s lactate | 130 | 109 | 4 | 3 | 28 | ||||
| Ringer’s acetate | 131 | 109 | 4 | 3 | 28 | ||||
| Hypertonic | |||||||||
| 3% NaCl | 513 | 513 |
.
Conditions requiring limiting or increasing the maintenance fluid volume (38).
| Conditions when maintenance therapy is decreased | Conditions when maintenance therapy is increased |
|---|---|
| Postoperative children | Increased activity |
| Children with brain or lung disease(meningitis, encephalitis, bronchiolitis, pneumonia) and other hospitilized children | Fever |
| Coma | Burns |
| Hypothermia | Excessive sweating |
| Hypothyroidism | Tachypnea |
| Oliguria/anuria | Tachycardia |
| Highly humidified atmospheres | Dry environment |
| Humidified ventilator circuits | Hyperventilation |
| Capillary leak | |
| Third spacing of fluid | |
| Extreme low birth weight | |
| Use of overhead heaters | |
| Use of phototherapy units | |
| Polyuria | |
| Surgical drains |
World Health Organization scale for dehydration for children 1 month to 5 years old (53).
| A | B | C | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Look at condition | Well, alert | Restless, irritable | Lethargic or unconscious |
| Eyes | Normal | Sunken | Sunken |
| Thirst | Drinks normally, not thirsty | Thirsty, drinks eagerly | Drinks poorly or not able to drink |
| Feel; skin pinch | Goes back quickly | Goes back slowly | Goes back very slowly ≥ 2 s |
Scoring; fewer than two signs from column B and C; no signs of dehydration, <5%; ≥2 signs in column B; moderate dehydration, 5–10%, ≥2 signs in column C; severe dehydration, >10%.
Gorelick scale for dehydration used in children between 1 month and 5 years (54).
| No or minimal dehydration | Moderate to severe dehydration | |
|---|---|---|
| Alert | Restless, lethargic, unconscious | |
| Normal | Prolonged or minimal | |
| Present | Absent | |
| Moist | Dry, very dry | |
| eye | Normal | Sunken, deeply sunken |
| breathing | Present | Deep, deep and rapid |
| Quality of pulses | Normal | Thread, weak or implapable |
| Skin elesticity | Instant recoil | Recoil slowly; recoil > 2 seconds |
| Heart rate | Normal | Tachycardia |
| Urine out put | Normal | Reduced, not passed in many hours |
4 point scale, italics.
≥2 clinical signs (4 point) ≥ 5% body weight from baseline.
≥3 clinical signs (4 point) ≥ 10% body weight from baseline.
10 point scale (all signs/symptoms).
≥3 clinical signs ≥ 5% body weight from baseline.
≥7 clinical signs ≥ 10% body weight from baseline.
Clinical dehydration score for children 1 month to 3 years (54).
| Score of 0 | Score of 1 | Score of 2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| General appearance | Normal | Thirsty, restless or lethargic but irritable when touched | Drowsy, limp, cold, sweaty ± comatose |
| Eyes | Normal | Slightly sunken | Very suncken |
| Mucous membrane | Moist | Sticky | Dry |
| Tears | Tears | Decreased tears | Absent tears |
A score of 0 indicates no dehydration, 1–4 indicates mild-to-moderate dehydration, and 5–8 indicates severe dehydration.
Compositions of some common oral rehydration solution-ORS (16, 55, 56).
| Sodium mmol/L | Potassium mmol/L | Base mmol/L | Glucose mg/dl | Osmolality mmol/L | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Old World Health Organization (WHO) ORS | 90 | 20 | 30 | 2.0 | 310 |
| New WHO ORS | 75 | 20 | 10 | 4.2 | 245 |
| Pedialyte | 45 | 20 | 30 | 2.5 | 270 |
| Ricelyte | 50 | 25 | 34 | 3.0 | 290 |
Figure 3A systematic approach to a patient with hyponatremia using urine sodium and urine osmolality (34). ATN, acute tubular necrosis; CHF, congestive heart failure; ECF, extracellular fluid; SIADH, syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone.
Common pathogen causing childhood diarrhea (61–64).
| Etiology | Common pathogens |
|---|---|
| Viruses | Rota virus |
| Bacteria | |
| Protozoa | |
| Un-identified | |
| Mixed infections | |