| Literature DB >> 35821131 |
Antonio Corsello1, Sabrina Malandrini2, Mario G Bianchetti2, Carlo Agostoni1,3, Barbara Cantoni3, Francesco Meani4, Pietro B Faré5, Gregorio P Milani6,7.
Abstract
Hyponatremia is a common disorder in childhood. The indirect and the direct potentiometry are currently the most popular techniques employed for sodium assessment, although discrepancies between the two techniques may be > 10 mmol/L. It is known that < 20% of the recently published articles report information about the technique used for sodium analysis, but no data are available on pediatric studies. This study aimed at investigating the laboratory technique employed for sodium measurement in studies conducted in childhood. A systematic literature search in PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science was undertaken to identify articles containing the word "hyponatremia" in the title between 2013 and 2020. Papers with < 10 subjects were excluded. A total of 565 articles were included. Information on the laboratory technique used for sodium analysis was more commonly (p = 0.035) reported in pediatric (n = 15, 28%) than in non-pediatric (n = 81, 16%) reports. The frequency of reports with and without information on the technique for sodium assessment was not different with respect to the study characteristics, the quartile of the journal where the paper was published, the country income setting, and the inclusion of neonates among the 54 pediatric studies.Entities:
Keywords: Electrolytes; Hyponatremia; Laboratory; Pediatrics; Potentiometry
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35821131 PMCID: PMC9395449 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-022-04543-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.860
Fig. 1Flowchart of the literature search process
Characteristics of the 565 articles included in this analysis
| 54 | 511 | |||
| Observational, | 45 (83) | 396 (77) | ||
| Interventional, n (%) | 9 (17) | 115 (23) | 0.389 | |
| Prospective, | 19 (35) | 194 (38) | ||
| Retrospective, | 35 (65) | 317 (62) | 0.769 | |
| 10–99, | 15 (28) | 143 (28) | ||
| ≥ 100, | 39 (72) | 368 (72) | 1.000 | |
| First quartile, | 10 (19) | 152 (30) | ||
| Further quartiles/no impact factor, | 44 (81) | 359 (70) | 0.112 | |
| High-income countries, | 37 (69) | 382 (75) | ||
| Middle- or low-income countries, | 17 (31) | 129 (25) | 0.329 | |
| Information published, | 15 (28) | 81 (16) | ||
| Information after inquiry/unavailable, | 39 (72) | 430 (84) | 0.035 | |
Relative frequency of direct and indirect potentiometry for determination of sodium in pediatric and non-pediatric reports (information provided either from the publication or after inquiry). Both indirect and direct potentiometry were concurrently used in 29 reports (pediatric, n = 1), flame spectrometry in two non-pediatric reports
| Indirect, | 197 (81) | 16 (57) | 181 (85) | |
| Direct, | 45 (19) | 12 (45) | 33 (15) | 0.001 |
Fig. 2Pediatric studies reporting within the text, the information on the technique employed for sodium assessment. Studies are compared for A design, B data collection, C journal quartile ranking, D number of included subjects, E country income setting, and F inclusion of neonates
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