Pharm2 10 Peds Fluids pt1 Flashcards

1
Q

World Health Organization - Oral Rehydration Solution (WHO-ORS) is a salty solution that proved effective in 1971 ___ outbreak during Bangladeshi war.

A

cholera

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2
Q

What is the ideal rehydration or maintenance solution?

A

Currently there is no ideal rehydration or maintenance solution available!

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3
Q

commercial solution. Like gatorade for kids, and exists as ice pops too.

A

Pedialyte

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4
Q

__ rehydration > all other modes of rehydration. But, we freq don’t explain this well to parents.

A

oral. Unless you really can’t (in shock), you’d want to try oral rehydration before resorting to anything else.

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5
Q

Mom says the baby throws up everything

How to judge if the kid is a candidate for oral rehydration (in general)

A

For a week?: Most likely no

For a day?: Most likely yes

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6
Q

Oral rehydration in peds/babies. How much? How fast?

What if they throw up during this process?
What if they still throw up??
What if they still fail???

A

Ex: coke in 5 cups. Teaspoon in the first, second, 2 tsp in 3rd-5th. One of these cups every 5 minutes and no sooner as long as they haven’t vomited.

If the kid throws up during this process, I stop, wait 30 minutes, and start again. (make sure regimen is correct)

still throwing up: Consider Zofran ODT (Ondansetron)
still: Consider ice pops, lollypops, etc. then try again

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7
Q

What is the adult fluid rate?

A

125 cc/hour

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8
Q

Establish an IV whenever…..

A

The child is in shock, severely dehydrated, or whenever, in spite of good oral intake, the child just can’t keep up with ongoing losses

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9
Q

The baby/kid is pooping 5 times in an hour, soaking wet from diarrheal stool. What should you do?

A

Need to start IV fluids.

won’t be able to keep up orally at this point.

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10
Q

Calculating fluid deficits
Child presents to clinic with step-father, poor historian, stating 2-3 day history of nausea and vomiting, amount unknown
Child was seen last week in clinic and weighed 15 kg, today weighs 13.5 kg

A

1.5 kg weight loss / 15 kg ideal body weight equals .10 loss = 10% total fluid deficit

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11
Q

define fluid deficit

A

how much are they down from vomiting, diarrhea, lack of intake.

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12
Q

Calculating fluid deficits
New foster mother presents to clinic with child stating unknown length of N/V/D
15 kg child, alert, makes eye contact, cries with scant tears, mucosa barely moist

A

This implies they are mildly dehydrated aka 5% deficit.

15 kg x 5% = .75 kg wt loss = 750 cc deficit

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13
Q

Normal saline (0.9% NS) is closest to sea water. This weighs __ per 1 cc.

_ Liters weighs: 1kg

A

1g per 1cc

1 liter weighs 1 kg

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14
Q

What is D5W? Why is that in there?

A

plain water with 5% dextrose added. Why is that in there? You catabolize your own tissue if you don’t have glucose to burn.

The bottom line: if you were to live off just IV solution, it should have some sugar, electrolytes, and volume to keep up w/ basic metabolic needs if you were laying in a bed unconscious

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15
Q

What’s the most deadly fluid to give a patient? Why? How would it kill them?

A

“free water.” – distilled water without electrolytes. It kills them b/c cells swell across the membrane all over the body. This in the foramen magnum = herniation. Free water has the potential to cause brain herniation.*

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16
Q

What is hot salt?

A

3.0% sodium. Raises Na too quickly. Won’t see this too often.

17
Q

When the child is in shock, when the child is severely dehydrated, our when you are in doubt, start your IV with

A

Normal saline.

18
Q

What’s the resuscitative bolus for Normal Saline?

A

20 cc/kg

19
Q

A child comes in profoundly dehydrated (AKA shock!). They weigh 10 kg.

What fluid should they get?
How much?
Then what do we do?
What if that doesn’t work???

A

Normal saline
200 cc (20 cc/kg x 10 kg = 200)
Then we assess them! If they’re not responsive and still in shock, then repeat the 20 cc per kg
any kid who requires more than 2 boluses…consider giving whole blood.

20
Q

What happens if you were to give a 3rd IV bolus of normal saline after the first 2 don’t work?

A

about 100% go into cardio resp arrest b/c something else is going on..like viral cardiomyolitis