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Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
FLUID AND ELECTROLYTE REQUIREMENTS
Complex fluid or electrolyte replacement or abnormal distribution issues
Electrolyte and glucose abnormalities
- If Na+ <135 mmol/L, follow Hyponatremia guideline
- If Na+ >150 mmol/L, follow Hypernatremia guideline
- If K+ >6.0 mmol/L, follow Hyperkalaemia guideline
- If plasma K+ <2.5 mmol/L with persistent losses/poor absorption or plasma K+ either persistently <3.0 mmol/L or <3.0 mmol/L and combined with new tachyarrhythmia or muscle weakness follow Hypokalaemia guideline
- If hyperglycaemic, use diabetic regimes where applicable
- see Triage of patients with hyperglycaemia guideline
- Seek senior help
Continuing Excess losses
Does the patient continue to have excess fluid loss?
- Vomiting
- Nasogastric tube losses,
- Diarrhoea,
- Fistulae
- Stoma
- Drains
- Continuing blood loss,
- Polyuria
- Sweating
- Lactation
Action if excess fluid loss
- Seek senior help
- Measure volume of losses and type of fluid lost
- consider biochemical analysis of fluid e.g. haematocrit, biochemistry and serum protein
- Replace volume using an appropriate fluid in addition to maintenance regimen
- if GI losses >1500 mL, check chloride level. If patient hypochloraemic, use sodium chloride 0.9% +/- potassium chloride
- replace diarrhoea/small bowel/bowel preparation losses with compound sodium lactate (Hartmann's) solution
Co-morbidities
Does the patient have co-morbidities?
- Frail elderly/malnourished
- Severe sepsis
- Chronic cardiac failure
- Chronic renal failure
- Chronic liver failure - seek advice of liver specialist
- Neurosurgical/neurological pathology
- Obese with BMI > 40
Action if co-morbidities
- Seek senior help
CHOICE OF MAINTENANCE FLUID FOR 'NORMAL' ADULT
'Normal' adult fluid, electrolyte and glucose maintenance requirements
- Use ideal body weight or actual body weight, whichever is lower, in estimations below
Water
- 25-30 mL/kg/day
- if no fever present, estimate is 25ml/kg/24hr
- if fever present, estimate is 30ml/kg/24hr
Sodium
- 50-170 mmol/day (1-2 mmol/kg/day)
Potassium
- 25-85 mmol/day (1 mmol/kg/day)
Chloride
- 80-120 mmol/day (1-1.5 mmol/kg/day)
Glucose
- 50-100 g/day to limit starvation ketosis
- but this does not address nutritional needs
- see Practice and ethics of nutritional support in medical patients
Amount of fluid and electrolyte
- Estimate maintenance volume and electrolyte required for a 'normal' patient
- If patient has other sources of maintenance fluid and electrolyte intake from drugs e.g. IV nutrition, blood and blood products reduce the maintenance prescription accordingly
- excluding resuscitation/replacement of excess losses
Choice of fluid
- Within fluid, give glucose 50-100g/day
- e.g. Glucose 5% contains 5g/100ml
- Round weight-based potassium prescriptions to the nearest common fluids available
- e.g. a 67 kg person could have fluids containing 20 mmol and 40 mmol of potassium in a 24-hour period
- Always use commercially produced pre-mixed bags of any fluid with potassium chloride
NEVER add potassium chloride to infusion bags
- For the 'general' patient, prescribe Maintelyte (1L contains: Na+ 40mmol, K+ 20mmol, Mg2+ 1.5mmol, Cl- 40mmol and glucose 50g) at 1ml/kg/hr
- if unavailable, prescribe sodium chloride 0.18% with glucose 4% with potassium chloride 20 mmol/L; but remember prescribing > 2.5 litre increases risk of hyponatraemia
- Adjust quantity and content of maintenance fluid used as indicated by most recent biochemical results
How to deliver
- Beneficial to deliver daily maintenance requirement over daytime hours
- more physiological and will promote sleep and wellbeing
- increase rate and limit time that infusion should run accordingly
- Give as much fluid volume as possible orally or enterally
- give remainder IV or, in selected medical patients, SC
- Suggestion - place a handwritten label on any bag containing potassium warning staff not to increase infusion rate
Cautions
- Stressed patients (e.g. post-operative, septic) are at risk of complication from excess of:
- chloride (hyperchloraemic acidosis caused by sodium chloride 0.9%)
- free water (e.g. acute hyponatraemia, seizures, brain damage and death if glucose solutions with inadequate sodium content are used)
- 1000 mL over 8 hr is not indicated for maintenance alone
- even for the largest pyrexial patients
Administer resuscitation fluid separately
- Many unstable patients need maintenance fluids with repeated fluid boluses for resuscitation
- Do not increase rate of maintenance fluids to resuscitate
- content of maintenance fluid (especially hypotonic or high potassium-content) is inappropriate/dangerous when given in large volumes required for resuscitation
- see Fluid resuscitation guideline
MONITORING
Chart
Hourly
- If continuing excess losses or patient haemodynamically unstable, urine output
6-hrly
- BP
- if patient haemodynamically unstable, increase frequency
Daily
- Fluid balance chart
- Serum U&E
- Body weight
Examine daily
- Check for peripheral oedema
- Auscultate lung fields
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
- Senior review daily
- Adjust quantity and content of maintenance fluid as indicated by most recent biochemical results
- As soon as possible, re-establish oral fluids and remove indwelling intravenous lines
Administer resuscitation fluid separately
- If deficit occurs despite maintenance fluid, administer adequate maintenance fluid concurrently with appropriate resuscitation fluid
- see Fluid resuscitation guideline
Fluid overload
- If signs of fluid overload appear and parenteral fluid remains necessary, restrict fluid input to maximum 1 L/24 hr or reduce input by 50%