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FLUID & NURITION THERAPY PATIENT OUTCOME Waleed Hamimy Professor of Anesthesia, SICU & Pain Management Cairo University

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Page 1: waleed_hamimy

FLUID & NURITION

THERAPY – PATIENT

OUTCOME Waleed Hamimy

Professor of Anesthesia, SICU & Pain Management

Cairo University

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Introduction

• Fluid therapy is fundamental to the practice of

ANESTHESIA, but the precise type, amount, &

timing of its administration is still the subject of

extensive debate

• This necessitates good understanding of normal

& abnormal physiology & the requirements for

patients under different circumstances

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Introduction

• Lack of knowledge is a cause of morbidity &

mortality due to fluid imbalance

• The fluid & electrolyte content is of vital

importance

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Importance of Fluid Therapy

• Maintain blood volume

• Avoid inadequate perfusion

• Avoid electrolyte disturbances & dehydration

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Errors in fluid management is the

most common cause of morbidity

& mortality

1999

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The right fluid in the

right amount for the

right patient at the

right time

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Type of fluid

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Why do we give fluids?

To

Maintain

To

Replace

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different fluids, along with their carrier solutions

are drugs with different effects.

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To Maintain

• We should know the normal daily requirements of

water & electrolytes

• Water 25-35 ml/kg/day

• Na+ 0.9-1.2 mmol /kg/day

• K+ 1 mmol/kg/day

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Serum Values of Electrolytes

Cations Concentration, mEq/L

Sodium 135 - 145

Potassium 3.5 - 4.5

Calcium 4.0 - 5.5

Magnesium 1.5 - 2.5

Anions

Chloride 95 - 105

HCO3 22 - 27

Phosphate 2.5 - 4.5

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Fluids available

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G 5%

NS

Ringer’s

RL

No electrolytes,

50 g glucose / liter

Na Cl

154 154

Na Cl K Ca HCO3

147 156 4 4.5 0

Na Cl K Ca HCO3

130 109 4 3 28

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• The same applies to colloids

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CONCENTRATION AND

SOLVENT

MEAN MOLECULAR

WEIGHT

MOLAR

SUBSTITUTION

C2/C6

RATIO

MAXIMUM

DAILY DOSE

ml/kg

HES

200/0.5

6% SALINE

10% SALINE

200 0.5 5:1 33

20

HES

130/0.42

6% SALINE 130 0.42 6:1 50

HES

130/0.4

6% SALINE

10% SALINE

130 0.4 9:1 50

33

HES

130/0.4

6%BALANCED

SOLUTIONS130 0.4 9:1 50

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Amount of fluids

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We are used to give excess fluids!!!!

• The following were considered:

• Preoperative fasting

• Losses

• Surgical blood loss

• Evaporation

• Urine output

• VD caused by spinal or epidural anesthesia

• Transfer to the third space

• Trans-capillary leak of albumin caused by injury

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Fluid shifting

• 1st space shifting- normal distribution of fluid in both

the ECF compartment & ICF compartment.

• 2nd space shifting- excess accumulation of interstitial

fluid (edema)

• 3rd space shifting- fluid accumulation in areas that

normally have no or little amounts of fluids (ascites)

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There was always an overestimation of

the total fluids required

• Maintenance 4 : 2 : 1 rule

• Deficit maintenance x h fasting

• Third space loss ??? 10 – 15 ml /kg/h

• Blood loss 3:1 by crystalloids

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Fatal Postoperative Pulmonary Edema*

Pathogenesis and Literature ReviewAllen I. Arieff, MD

• Retrospective analysis of 13 patients with fatal

pulmonary edema.

• Ten were generally healthy while three having serious associated

medical conditions.

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Fatal Postoperative Pulmonary Edema*

Pathogenesis and Literature ReviewAllen I. Arieff, MD

• Conclusions:

• Pulmonary edema can occur within the initial 36 postoperative

hours when net fluid retention exceeds 67 mL/kg/d.

• There are no known predictive warning signs & cardiorespiratory

arrest is the most frequent clinical presentation.

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British Journal of Surgery 2009; 96: 331–341

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CONCLUSION:

Perioperative outcomes favored a GD therapy rather than liberal

fluid therapy without hemodynamic goals. Whether GD therapy is

superior to a restrictive fluid strategy remains uncertain.

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Even in the postoperative period

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Conclusions: The use of a restrictive

postoperative fluid protocol significantly

reduces the duration of hospital stay in

patients who have undergone major elective

abdominal vascular surgery.

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Normal Maintenance Requirements

For Water it is typically 35 mL/kg/day

1. 1-10 kg = 100 mL/kg/day {4mL/kg/hr}

2. 11-20 kg = 50 mL/kg/day {2mL/kg/hr}

3. > 21 kg = 20 mL/kg/day {1mL/kg/hr}

4. insensible loss = 700 mL/day or 0.2 cc/kg/day for every 1° C > 37°

Simply, hourly maintenance = 40 + weight (kg)

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Metabolic response to fasting

• metabolic rate substrate oxidation

accelerated catabolism (breakdown of

glycogen, fat & protein).

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Metabolic response to fasting

• Insulin levels are often increased but blood

glucose levels also increase due to the

developed insulin resistance.

• The insulin/glucagon ratio is reduced, resulting in an

increased gluconeogenesis

• Conventional preoperative fasting time may

aggravate insulin resistance hyperglycemia

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Metabolic response to fasting

• Additionally, overnight fasting variable

degrees of dehydration depending on the

duration of the fasting period

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Benefits of less fasting hours

• Reduction of preoperative fasting time seems to have a

beneficial effect on peri-operative thirst, hunger, anxiety &

muscle strength.

• Patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery treated with

the same preoperative fasting protocol were less thirsty

compared with controls & required less intraoperative

inotropic support after initiation of CPB weaning.

Breuer et al. Preoperative oral carbohydrate administration to ASA III-IV patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery. Anesth Analg. 2006;103:1099-1108.

Hausel et al. A carbohydrate-rich drink reduces preoperative discomfort in elective surgery patients. Anesth Analg. 2001;93:1344-1350

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New recommendation

• Intake of clear fluids until 2 h before surgery &

anesthesia.

• ESPEN recommended, a carbohydrate-rich drink 2 h

before anesthesia (grade A evidence)

1. Noblett et al. Pre-operative oral carbohydrate loading in

colorectal surgery: a randomized controlled trial. Colorectal Dis. Sep 2006;8(7):563-569.

2. Nygren J, Thorell A, Ljungqvist O. Preoperative oral

carbohydrate nutrition: an update. Curr Opin Clin Nutr MetabCare. Jul 2001;4(4):255-259.

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Are these recommendation applied?

• CURRENT KNOWLEDGE, PRACTICE AND ATTITUDE

OF PREOPERATIVE FASTING: A LIMITED

SURVEY AMONG UPPER EGYPT ANESTHETISTS

• ossama Hamdy; Salah M Asseda; Hatem S Ali,

• South valley University

• showed that the majority (72%) of studied Anesthetists

are aware of the new preoperative fasting guidelines;

however, they are still practicing strict preoperative NPO

from midnight. Only 10% follow the new guidelines.

EgJA 2013

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HAS THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE CURRENT PRE-

OPERATIVE FASTING GUIDELINES (UK GIFTASUP) BEEN

SUCCESSFUL?

AN AUDIT OF CURRENT PRACTICE

Thomas Hall, James Stephenson, Cristina

Pollard, Ashley Dennison. Int. J. Surgery (2012)

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• Methods:

• A prospective audit of all surgical patients undergoing a general

surgical procedure requiring a general anesthetic using a

structured questionnaire over a 20 day period was performed

• Results:

• 75 patients were followed through the perioperative period with 41

elective and 34 emergency cases. The average pre-operative NBM

period for clear liquids was 14 and 19 hours in the elective group

and emergency group respectively. Zero patients in the elective

group had clear fluids 2 hours prior to induction of anesthesia and 2

(5%) patients in this group had clear fluids between 2 & 6 hours

prior to anesthesia.

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• Conclusion:

• The results demonstrate that adherence to the guidelines is poor.

With the advent of enhanced recovery programs and an emphasis

on early enteral feeding post-operatively to maintain ‘normal'

physiology we appear to have forgotten about the pre-operative

period. Education about the guidelines is desperately needed.

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