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Intravenous maintenance fluid tonicity and hyponatremia after major surgery- a cohort study.

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BACKGROUND Intravenous maintenance fluid (IMF) tonicity and composition influence plasma electrolyte balance. OBJECTIVE To determine if hypotonic IMF therapy contributes to post-surgical hyponatremia. SETTING Single-center tertiary institution. PARTICIPANTS Adults who… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND Intravenous maintenance fluid (IMF) tonicity and composition influence plasma electrolyte balance. OBJECTIVE To determine if hypotonic IMF therapy contributes to post-surgical hyponatremia. SETTING Single-center tertiary institution. PARTICIPANTS Adults who underwent major surgery and received peri-surgical IMF, with exclusive administration of hypotonic pre-mixed 0.33% saline, 5% dextrose and potassium chloride (DK0.33%S), or isotonic 0.9% saline with or without 5% dextrose (NS/DNS). OUTCOMES AND MEASURES We examined post-surgical hyponatremia, hypokalemia and acute kidney injury (AKI), associated with use of either IMF. RESULTS We studied 659 patients, of whom 161 patients (24%) developed post-surgical hyponatremia. DK0.33%S (versus NS/DNS) IMF was administered in 52% of patients who developed hyponatremia, compared to 38% of patients with stable natremia (p = 0.001). More patients with hyponatremia underwent gastrointestinal-hepatobiliary or abdominal (GI/HBS/Abd) surgery versus other surgical-sites (p = 0.001). Hypokalemia developed in 1% versus 10% of patients who received DK0.33%S and NS/DNS IMF respectively (p< 0.001), with corresponding AKI rates of 3% versus 7% (p = 0.02). On multivariate analysis, adjusted for timing of biochemistry post-surgery, IMF infusion rate and volume; independent factors associated with post-surgical hyponatremia included DK0.33%S administration, GI/HBS/Abd surgery (versus other sites), and post-surgical AKI (p < 0.05). Subgroup analysis by surgical sites showed that association of DK0.33%S administration with hyponatremia was most evident in GI/HBS/Abd surgery. CONCLUSIONS Administration of DK0.33%S IMF, compared with NS/DNS, is associated with post-surgical hyponatremia in adults after major surgery, but with less hypokalemia. The higher rate of AKI observed with NS/DNS IMF requires further evaluation.

Keywords: surgery; hyponatremia; major surgery; post surgical; surgical hyponatremia; imf

Journal Title: International journal of surgery
Year Published: 2019

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