1 / 20

Fluid and Electrolytes in Surgical Patients

Fluid and Electrolytes in Surgical Patients. Ruth Mitchell, BA, BSc, BMBS Neurosurgical Resident Royal Melbourne Hospital Thursday, March 18, 2010.

soyala
Télécharger la présentation

Fluid and Electrolytes in Surgical Patients

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fluid and Electrolytes in Surgical Patients Ruth Mitchell, BA, BSc, BMBS Neurosurgical Resident Royal Melbourne Hospital Thursday, March 18, 2010

  2. Peri-operative fluid and electrolyte management: a survey of consultant surgeons in the UK. D. N. Lobo, M. G. Dube, K. R. Neal, S. P. Allison, and B. J. Rowlands Ann R Coll Surg Engl. 2002 May; 84(3): 156–160. • 710 questionnaires to consultant surgeons • junior staff given written guidelines 22% of cases • 16% felt their interns were adequately trained before joining the firm • only 30% felt postoperative patients were given appropriate amounts of water, sodium and potassium

  3. What you need to know • Patients need fluid • Patients need electrolytes • Surgical patients are at your mercy

  4. How much?

  5. How much? In a 65kg man • Fluid: 2.5-3L water • Sodium: 100-150mmol • Potassium: 60-90mmol • Fluid requirements increase in fever

  6. 65 year old man • Admitted for severe and constant lower abdo pain, began on L side • Vomiting, unwell • 24 hours ago he had a colonoscopy and polypectomy (x2) • Febrile 38.5, dry coated tongue and loss of skin turgor, thirsty • Tachycardic 110pbm • BP 110/70 lying, 90 systolic sitting up • Mildly distended abdo, rigid, no bowel sounds

  7. What’s going on?

  8. What’s going on? • Likely perforated colon • Peritonitis • Risk post polypectomy is 0.5-1% • R colon more common • Immediate or delayed

  9. What’s your management plan?

  10. What’s your management plan? • IV Cannula • IV therapy –1L over 1hour of normal saline • Oxygen via face mask • Analgesia • Take blood • CXR and AXR • Broad spectrum antibiotics • Call a surgeon

  11. Hb 164 (130-170) Plt 350 (140-400) WCC 13.6 (4.0-11.0) Na 149 (135-145) K 3.4 (3.5-5.5) Cl 112 (95-110) Bicarb 29 (22-30) Glucose 4.4 Chol 3.6 LDH 110 Amylase 65 Ca 2.16 (2.10-2.60) Phos 1.15 (0.8-1.5) TP 65 (60-82) Alb 38 (35-50) Bili 19 (<19) Alt, ast, ggt, alp - nad Blood Results

  12. Blood results • Elevated WCC – inflammation and infection • High haemoglobin – dehydration • Biochemical values: high urea, sodium and chloride – dehydration

  13. What fluid to give?

  14. What fluid to give? • Replace lost fluid with normal saline (isotonic) • Start with 2L of normal saline over 1 hour • Estimate fluid loss and make a plan to replace it

  15. Maintenance Fluid • 2.5-3L/day • Normal saline • Dextrose • Hartmanns/CSL

  16. Replacement Fluid • Calculate and replace frequently • Consider loses through increased temperature, NGT, vomitus, ileostomy • Replace like with like

  17. Update… • Exploratory laparotomy shows purulent peritonitis, perforated transverse colon • Transverse colon resected, defunctioning ileostomy performed

  18. Fluid output Urine 800mL Urine last 4 hours 15/13/9/8mL NGT 2500mL Wound drain 300mL Ileostomy 3000mL Fluid balance 24 hours later • Fluid input • IV fluid 4500mL

  19. Electrolytes • Na 138 • K 2.6 • Cl 102 • Bicarb 29 • Urea 7.0 • Creat 0.08

  20. Thank you! Questions?

More Related