Fluids and Electrolytes Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of dehydration

A

A potentially harmful reduction in the overall fluid/water in the body, which occurs when intake of fluid/electrolytes is less than the loss of fluid/electrolytes

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2
Q

Causes of dehydration

A

*Fever
GI losses: *Viral gastroenteritis (most common), bacterial/parasitic infections, DKA, inborn errors of metabolism, intestinal obstruction/history of surgical resection, chronic disease (Crohn’s, CF, etc.)
Sweating/Excessive heat/Burns
Polyuria (DKA)
Imbalance in regulation of sodium/water (DI,SIADH - hormonal)

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3
Q

In which population does dehydration occur the most?

A

Neonates and infants

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4
Q

Severity of dehydration in infants (%)

A

Mild: 1-5%
Moderate: 6-9%
Severe: >10%
>/=15% = SHOCK

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5
Q

Severity of dehydration in older children (%)

A

Mild: 1-3%
Moderate: 4-6%
Severe: >6%
>/=9% = SHOCK

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6
Q

Severity of dehydration (% estimated) equation

A

[(pre-illlness weight (kg) - illness weight (kg)) / pre-illness weight (kg)] x100

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7
Q

Fluid deficit (L) equation

A

% dehydration x pre-illness weight (kg) x 100

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8
Q

Signs/symptoms of MILD dehydration:
Pulse
SBP
UOP
Buccal mucosa
Anterior fontanelle
Eyes
Skin turgor/cap. refill
Skin (<12 months)
Tears
Mental status
Thirst

A

Pulse: normal/increased
SBP: normal
UOP: decreased
Buccal mucosa: slightly dry
Anterior fontanelle: normal
Eyes: normal
Skin turgor/cap. refill: normal
Skin (<12 months): normal
Tears: normal
Mental status: normal
Thirst: drinks normally

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9
Q

Signs/symptoms of MODERATE dehydration:
Pulse
SBP
UOP
Buccal mucosa
Anterior fontanelle
Eyes
Skin turgor/cap. refill
Skin (<12 months)
Tears
Mental status
Thirst

A

Pulse: Tachycardia
SBP: Normal, low
UOP: Little/no output
Buccal mucosa: Dry
Anterior fontanelle: Sunken
Eyes: Sunken
Skin turgor/cap. refill: Delayed, cool, pale
Skin (<12 months): Cool
Tears: Decreased
Mental status: Normal to listless
Thirst: Thirsty

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10
Q

Signs/symptoms of SEVERE dehydration:
Pulse
SBP
UOP
Buccal mucosa
Anterior fontanelle
Eyes
Skin turgor/cap. refill
Skin (<12 months)
Tears
Mental status
Thirst

A

Pulse: Rapid and weak
SBP: Decreased, very low
UOP: Oliguria
Buccal mucosa: Parched
Anterior fontanelle: Very sunken
Eyes: Very sunken
Skin turgor/cap. refill: Very delayed, cool, and mottled
Skin (<12 months): Acrocyanosis
Tears: No tears
Mental status: Normal to lethargic/comatose
Thirst: Drinks poorly, unable to drink

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11
Q

Goal of therapy for dehydration

A

Restore fluid and electrolyte balance in combination with early introduction of appropriate food and oral liquids, as tolerated

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12
Q

Mode of rehydration: MILD

A

Oral rehydration therapy

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13
Q

Mode of rehydration: MODERATE

A

Oral rehydration therapy

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14
Q

Mode of rehydration: SEVERE

A

Intravenous fluid
Also for shock, failure of ORT, coma/unconscious, abdominal emergency

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15
Q

ORT Dosing

A

Mild: 50mL/kg over 4 hour period, reassess status every 2 hours
Moderate: 100mL/kg over 4 hour period, reassess status hourly
Add 10mL/kg for each loose stool/vomiting episode for both mild/moderate

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16
Q

IVF dosing for rehydration

A

Phase I: 10-20 mL/kg/dose of NS or LR over 30-60 minutes as IV bolus, repeat up to 3 times based on signs/symptoms
Phase II: First 8 hours, calculate and replace fluid deficit; next 16 hours, calculate and provide maintenance rate

17
Q

Monitoring parameters of rehydration therapy

A

Normalization of blood pressure
Adequate urine output for age/weight
Improvement in clinical signs/symptoms of dehydration
Normalization of serum electrolytes/laboratory parameters

18
Q

Components of IVF

A

Sodium
Must be included to avoid sodium shifts/hyponatremia
NS (0.9%) = isotonic
1/2 NS (0.45%) = hypotonic
1/4 NS (0.225%) = very limited, certain circumstances only

Dextrose
D5W = 5%
D10W = 10%|used in neonates, infants with hypoglycemia
>12.5% - requires central line

Potassium
Standard concentration: 20 mEq/L
Commercially available bags range from 10-40 mEq/L
Can compound higher concentration if needed
Use with caution in patients with renal failure and in neonates

19
Q

Additional electrolytes in IVF

A

Magnesium, phosphate, calcium based on individual needs

20
Q

Negative anions in IVF

A

When providing cations (Na+, K+), also provides negative anion (chloride or acetate)
Standard: *Chloride
Can compound with “potassium acetate” under certain circumstances such as DKA

21
Q

Maintenance IVF for neonates

A

< 1500 g: 130-150 mL/kg/day
1500-2000 g: 110-130 mL/kg/day
Full term: 80-140 mL/kg/day

22
Q

Maintenance IVF for infants/children/adolescents

A

4-2-1 *hourly requirement
<10 kg: 4 mL/kg/hr
10-20 kg: 40 mL/hr + 2 mL/kg/hr x (weight-10kg)
>20 kg: 60 mL + 1 mL/kg/hr x (weight - 20 kg)

Holliday-Segar: *24 hour requirement
<10 kg: 100 mL/kg
10-20 kg: 1000 mL + 50 mL/kg x (weight - 10 kg)
>20 kg: 1500 mL + 20 mL/kg x (weight - 20 kg)

23
Q

Management of gastroenteritis

A

Ondansetron: 5-HT3 receptor antagonist, blocks serotonin at peripheral vagal nerve terminals and at central chemoreceptor trigger zone.
Provide a single dose to assist patient in tolerating ORT
Dose = 0.15-0.3 mg/kg/dose in patients > 6 months of age
ADEs: Risk of QTc prolongation, arrhythmias
Available as OS, tablet, ODT, IV

Not recommended: Probiotics, zinc (unless deficient), antidiarrhea medications