Title: PRINCIPLES OF FLUID
1PRINCIPLES OF FLUID ELECTROLYTE BALANCE IN
SURGICAL PATIENTS
2NORMAL DAILY LOSSES AND REQUIREMENTS FOR FLUIDS
AND ELECROLYTES
- Volume Na K
- ML mmol mmol
- Urine 2000 80
60 - Insensible losses 700 -
- - Faeces 300 -
10 - Minus endogenous 300 -
- - Water
- Total 2700
80 70
3ASSESSING LOSSES IN THE SURGICAL PATIENT
- INSENSIBLE FLUID LOSSES
- EFFECT OF SURGERY
- The stress response
- Third-Space losses
- Loss from the gastrointestinal tract
4INTRAVENOUS FLUID
- 5 DEXTROSE
- 0.9 NaCl
- RINGERS LACTATE (HARTMANNS SOLUTION)
- HAEMACCEL (SUCCINYLATED GELATIN)
- GELOFUSINE (POLYGELINE GELATIN)
- HETATARCH
- HUMAN ALBUMIN SOLUTION 4.5 (HASPPF)
5PROVISION OF NORMAL 24-HR FLUID ELECTROLYTE
REQUIREMENTS BY INTRAVENOUS INFUSION
- Intravenous fluid Additive Duration
- 500 ml 0.9 NaCl 20mmol KCl 4hr
- 500 ml 5 Dextrose -
4hr - 500 ml 5 Dextrose 20 mmol KCl 4hr
- 500 ml 0.9Dextrose - 4hr
- 500 ml 5 Dextrose 20 mmol KCl 4hr
- 500 ml 5 Dextrose -
4hr
6AETIOLOGY OF HYPER AND HYPONATRAEMIA
- Hyponatraemia
- -------------------
-
- - Low extracellular fluid volume
- Volume depletion
(vomiting,diahrrhoea,burns,decreased fluid
intake) - salt losing renal disease
- Hypoadrenalism
- diuretic use
-
- - Normal extracelluler fluid volume
- hypothyroidism
- SIADH
- Increased extracellular fluid volume
- excessive water administration
- excessive mannitol use
- cardiac failure
- cirrhosis
- nephritic syndrome
- renal failure
- Hypernatraemia
- -------------------
- Reduced intake
- fasting
- nausea and vomiting
- ileus
- reduced conscious level
- Increased loss
- Sweating (pyrexia,hot environment)
- respiratory tract loss(increased
ventilation, administration of dry gases) - administration of dry gases
- burns
- Inappropriate urinary water loss
- Diabetes inspidus(pituitary or nephrogenic)
- Diabetes mellitus
- Excessive Sodium load (hypertonic fluid,
parenteral nutrition)
7CONSEQUENCES OF HYPER AND HYPOKALEMIA
- HYPERKALEMIA
- Arrythmias(broad-complex rhythms,bradycardia,hear
t block,ventricular fibrillation) - Muscle heart block
- Ileus
- Hypokalemia
- ECG changes
- Ectopic beats
- Muscle weakness
8MANAGEMENT OF SEVERE ACUTE HYPERKALAEMIA (K gt
7mmol/L)
- Identify and treat cause
- 10 20 mL intravenous 10 calcium chloride over
10 min in patients with ECG abnormalities - (reduced risk of ventricular fibrillation)
- 50 mL 50dextrose plus 10 units short acting
insulin over 2-3min - Monitor plasma glucose and K over
next30-60 min) - Regular Salbutomol nebulizers
- Consider oral or rectal calcium
- Resonium (ion exchange resin),although this is
more effective for non-acute hyperkalaemia. - Haemodialysis for persistent hyperkalemia
9ACID BASE BALANCE
- METABOLIC ACIDOSIS
- METABOLIC ALKALOSIS
- RESPIRATORY ACIDOSIS
- RESPIRATORY ALKALOSIS
- MIXED PATTERN OF ACID-BASE IMBALANCE
10COMMON CAUSES OF METABOLIC ACIDOSIS IN THE
SURGICAL PATIENT
- LACTIC ACIDOSIS
- Shock (any causes)
- Severe hypoxaemia
- Severe haemorrhage/anaemia
- ACCUMULATION OF OTHER ACIDS
- Diabetic Ketocaidosis
- Acute Renal Failure
-
- INCREASED BICARBONATE LOSS
- Diahrroea
- Intestinal Fistulae
- Ureterosigmoidostomy
11COMMON CAUSES OF METABOLIC ALKALOSIS
- LOSS OF SODIUM AND WATER
- Vomiting
- Aspiration of gastric secretions
- Diuretic administration
-
- HYPOKALEMIA
12CAUSES OF RESPIRATORY ACIDOSIS
- Excessive opiate administration
- Pulmonary complications e.g Pneumonia
13CAUSES OF RESPIRATORY ALKALOSIS ENCOUNTERED IN
SURGICAL PRACTICE
- Hyperventilation during mechanical ventilation
- Pain
- Apprehension/hysterical hyperventilation
- Pneumonia
- Central nervous system disorders(meningitis,enceph
alopathy) - Septicaemia
14Principles of fluid and electrolyte balance in
surgical patients
15- 1. What are the normal values or serum sodium,
potassium, creatinine and urea? - 2. What are the normal basal requirements for
water, sodium and potassium? - 3. How can this be provided in a patient who is
fasting? - 4. How is fluid retained in the intravascular
compartment? - 5. What might cause it to leak out?
- 6. In clinical practice, it is often desirable to
"expand" the intravascular compartment. Why might
this be desirable and how could it be done? - 7. What are the clinical symptoms and signs of
fluid depletion? How can the severity of fluid
depletion be assessed? - 8. How can clinicians assess the patients
response to resuscitation in severe fluid
depletion? - 9. What biochemical disturbance might you expect
in a patient with gastric outlet obstruction who
has been vomiting for several days before
admission? - 10. What biochemical abnormalities might you
expect in a patient who has had excessive
diarrhoea and who has been drinking large amounts
of water because of thirst? (If a house officer
inadvertently prescribed too much 5 dextrose and
not enough N Saline, you would find the same
effect) - In patients with massive burns, fluid losses are
impossible to measure. How might you assess fluid
requirements?