Title: Fluids and Electrolytes in the Newborn
1Fluids and Electrolytes in the Newborn
2Body fluid composition in the fetus and
newborn
- Total Body Water ICF ECF (IntravascularInters
titial) - As gestational age increases, TBW and ECF
decrease while ICF increases - At birth, TBW 75 of body weight in term
infants and about 80 in premature infants - ECF decreases from 70 to 45
- At 32 wks gestation, TBW 83 and ECF 53
3 Perinatal changes
- During the first week to 10 days of life,
reduction in body weight is due to the reduction
in the ECF - Term infants- wt loss 5-10 within 3-5 days of
birth - LBW infants lose about 10-15 of body weight
during the first 5 days of life - Can lead to imbalances in sodium and water
homeostasis
4 Sodium balance in the
newborn
- Renal sodium losses are inversely proportional
to gestational age - Term infants have Fractional excretion of sodium
1 with transient increases on day 2 and 3 - At 28 weeks- Fractional excretion of Sodium 5
to 6 - Preterm infants lt35wks display negative sodium
balance and hyponatremia during first 2-3 wks of
life
5 Sodium balance in the
newborn
- Preterm infants may need 4-5mEq/kg of sodium per
day to offset high renal losses - Increased urinary sodium losses
- hypoxia
- respiratory distress
- hyperbilirubinemia
- ATN
- polycythemia
- increased fluid and salt intake
- diuretics.
6 Sodium balance in the
newborn
- Pharmacologic agents like dopamine, labetalol,
propranolol, captopril and enalaprilat increase
urinary sodium losses - Fetal and postnatal kidneys exhibit diminished
responsiveness to aldosterone compared to adult
kidneys
7Water balance in the newborn
- Primarily controlled by ADH which enables water
to be reabsorbed by the distal nephron collecting
duct - Stimulation of ADH occurs when blood volume is
diminished or when serum osmolality increases
above 285mOsm/kg - Intravascular volume has a greater influence on
ADH secretion than serum osmolality
8Renal concentration and diluting capacity
- Adults can concentrate urine up to 1500mOsm/kg of
plasma water and dilute as low as 50mOsm/kg of
plasma water - Concentrating capacity is 800 mOsm/kg in term
infants and 600 mOsm/kg in preterm - Diluting capacity is 50 mOsm/kg in term and 70
mOsm/kg in preterm - Newborns have reduction in GFR and decreased
activity of transporters in the early distal
tubule
9 Fluid requirements in the first
month of life
- Birth weight Water requirements
- D 1-2 D3-7
D8-30 - lt750 100-200 150-200 120-180
- 750-1000 80-150 100-150 120-180
- 1000-1500 60-100 80-150 120-180
- gt1500 60-80 100-150 120-180
10Factors affecting insensible water losses in the
neonate
- Level of maturity
- Elevated body temperature increases loss by 10
- Radiant warmer - increased by 50 compared to
thermo-neutral with high humidity - Phototherapy increases losses by 50
- High ambient or inspired humidity - reduced by
30 - Double walled isolette or plastic shield reduces
losses by 10-30
11Electrolyte requirements
- Day 1-2
- Sodium or chloride are not provided in IVF due to
high content of these electrolytes in body fluids
(unless serum Na lt135 mEq/l) - Potassium is not added until urinary flow has
been established - Day 3-7
- Na, K, Cl requirements are about 2-3mEq/kg/day
for term infants and 3-5 mEq/kg per day for
preterm infants - After the first week
- 2-3mEq/kg/day of sodium and chloride are needed
12Monitoring fluid and electrolyte
balance
- Body weight
- Fluid intake
- Urine and stool output
- Serum electrolytes
- Urine osmolarity or specific gravity
- Oral mucosal integrity
- Heart rate and blood pressure
- Capillary refill
- Sunken anterior
- fontanelle
-
13 Monitoring fluid and electrolytes
- During the first few days of life
- Urine output should be about 1-3ml/kg/hour
- SG of urine 1.008-1.012
- Wt loss of 5-8 in term and 15 in VLBW infants
- Monitor serum electrolytes at 8-24 hour intervals
- After the first week
- weight gain of 20-30gm/day
- Monitor electrolytes at intervals based on use of
TPN
14 Hyponatremia
- Serum sodium lt 130mmol/L
- Early onset in the first week is due to excess
free water or increased vasopressin release - perinatal asphyxia, respiratory distress,
bilateral pneumothoraces, IVH - Increased free water or suboptimal sodium in
formula or IV fluids
15Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
- Cause
- Most common form of CAH is complete absence of 21
hydroxylase activity - Severe renal sodium wasting due to deficient
aldosterone production and inhibition of sodium
absorption in the distal nephron - Symptoms
- Ambiguous genitalia, hyponatremia, hyperkalemia,
and metabolic acidosis
16Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
- Treatment
- Normal saline or 3 saline used to correct the
sodium to at least 125mEq/L, glucoseinsulin, and
NaHCO3 - Glucocorticoid and sodium replacement
17Hyponatremia in late newborn
- Caused by negative sodium balance
- Excess renal losses, SIADH, renal failure, edema
- Low sodium intake, diuretics, mineralocorticoid
deficiency (hypoNa, hyperK, metabolic acidosis,
shock) - Treat with water restriction and repletion of
deficit
18 Treatment of Hyponatremia
- Fluid restriction which results in a slow return
to normal levels - Urgent correction necessary if serum sodium is lt
120 mEq/L b/c obtundation or seizure activity may
develop - Hypertonic saline 3, 6ml/kg infused over 1 hour
(increases Na by 5 mEq/L) - Administer to increase Na to 120-125mEq/L and
eliminate seizures
19Correction of hyponatremia
- Based on sodium deficit X volume of distribution
of sodium - mEq Na needed (Goal Na-Serum Na) X TBW (60) X
body weight in kg - Prevents rapid correction (no more than 0.5
mEq/L/h) - mEq Na (140-serum Na) X 0.6 X body weight
-
20 Hypernatremia
- Serum sodium gt 150mEq/L
- Most often in ELBW infants
- High rates of insensible water losses and reduced
ECF volume - Treat by reducing sodium administration and
increasing free water - Rapid correction of more than 0.5mEq/L/h should
be avoided - causes cerebral edema, seizures, and death
21 Hypokalemia
- Serum Potassium lt 3mEq/L
- Causes
- Diuretic use, renal tubular defects, NG tube
drainage, or ileostomy - Can lead to weakness, paralysis, ileus,
conduction defects (ST depression, low voltage T
waves, U waves) - Treat by increasing the intake by 1-2 mEq/kg
- If severe, 0.5-1mEq/kg is infused IV over 1 hour
with EKG monitoring
22Hyperkalemia
- Serum potassium gt 6mEq/L
- Causes
- renal failure, CAH, IVH, cephalohematoma,
hemolysis, excess administration - EKG- Peaked T waves, flat P waves, increased PR
interval, widening of QRS - Bradycardia, SVT, VT may occur
23Treatment of Hyperkalemia
- D/C K in IVF
- Reverse the effect of hyperkalemia on the cell
membranes - infuse 10 Calcium gluconate (100mg/kg/dose)
- Promote movement of K from the ECF into the cells
- NaHCO3 1-2 mEq/kg IV over 5-10 min
- Insulin-0.05 units/kg with 2ml/kg/hr of D10
- Furosemide 1mg/kg/dose if there is adequate renal
function to increase renal excretion - Peritoneal dialysis in case of oliguria/anuria
24Fluid and electrolyte therapy in common conditions
- Perinatal asphyxia resulting in ATN
- Fluid restriction urine outputinsensible
losses, no potassium - Anuric term infant 30ml/kg/day
- Anuric preterm 80ml/kg/day
- If the cause of the anuria is unclear give
10ml/kg of crystalloid or colloid