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“Oh yeah, and add an order for IV fluids …”. How to order the right IV fluids for your patients. Objectives. Practical overview of writing orders for IV fluids. Learn about the 3 major goals of IV fluid therapy Deficit correction Maintenance fluids Replacing ongoing losses.
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“Oh yeah, and add an order for IV fluids…” How to order the right IV fluids for your patients.
Objectives • Practical overview of writing orders for IV fluids. • Learn about the 3 major goals of IV fluid therapy • Deficit correction • Maintenance fluids • Replacing ongoing losses
Additional learning • Anesthesia • Pre and post operative • Surgery • Trauma • Medicine • Sepsis, DKA, etc. • Pediatrics • (Elective) Critical Care Medicine
Basic components: • Route – IV • Fluid type • Added potassium? • Volume • Rate • Total volume, or time to reassess
Example • IV 0.5 NS with 20 mEq/L KCl at 125 ml/hour, Reassess tomorrow morning. Route
Fluid type Potassium added Example • IV 0.5 NS with 20 mEq/L KCl at 125 ml/hour, Reassess tomorrow morning.
Example • IV 0.5 NS with 20 mEq/L KCl at 125 ml/hour, Reassess tomorrow morning. Rate
Example • IV 0.5 NS with 20 mEq/L KCl at 125 ml/hour, Reassess tomorrow morning. Time to reassess.
Example • IV 0.5 NS with 20 mEq/L KCl at 125 ml/hour, Reassess tomorrow morning.
Types of fluids • Blood products • Colloid • Crystalloids
Blood Products • Packed Red Blood Cells (PRBC) • Ordered in units • Fresh Frozen Plazma (FFP) • Contains all plasma clotting factors • Platelets • Albumin – intravascular volume expander • Factor VII – order by Hematology Get Help if ordering blood products.
Colloid • Pentaspan (most commonly available synthetic) • Used to resuscitate and to increase the intravascular volume. • Max. 2 Litres in 24 hours (70 kg) • PRBCs • Albumin
Colloids 2 Litres of colloid 30 Litres Intracellular fluid 9 Litres Interstitial fluid 3 Litres Intravascular fluid
Colloids 30 Litres Intracellular 9 Litres Interstitial 5 Litres Intravascular
Colloids 29 Litres Intracellular 8 Litres Interstitial 7 Litres Intravascular
Crystalloids • Normal Saline = 0.9 saline • 5% dextrose • 0.2 saline with 5% Dextrose • Others
Normal Saline 2 Litres of 0.9% saline 30 Litres Intracellular 9 Litres Interstitial 3 Litres Intravascular
Normal Saline 30 Litres Intracellular 9 Litres Interstitial 5 Litres Intravascular
Normal Saline 29 Litres Intracellular 10.5 Litres Interstitial 4.5 Litres Intravascular
5% Dextrose (D5W) 2 Litres of 5% dextrose 30 Litres Intracellular 9 Litres Interstitial 3 Litres Intravascular
5% Dextrose (D5W) 31 Litres Intracellular 9.7 Litres Interstitial 3.3 Litres Intravascular
The rules of fluid replacement: • Replace blood with blood • Replace plasma with colloid • Resuscitate with colloid • Replace ECF depletion with saline • Re-hydrate with dextrose
Deficit - Adult For Pediatrics see your handout.
Approach to IV Fluids • Deficit • Maintenance • Ongoing Losses
Water as % of Body Weight • Newborns 75-80% • D5W/0.2% NS for <15 kg • At one year 65% • D5w/0.45% NS for >15 kg • Adult Male 60% • Adult Female 50% • Elderly 45%
Water Distribution • TBW = 2/3 ICF + 1/3 ECF • ECF = 2/3 interstitial + 1/3 intravascular • Intravascular volume (L) = (Wt [kg] x Percent Body Water) 9
Rate of replacement General Rule • Give half of deficit in the first 8 hours and the next half over 16 hours. • This is NOT true for someone in shock.
Example: • 45 year-old woman • She weighs 60 kg. • She has a dry axilla & a dry tongue • How much crystalloid should you give her?
Example solved. • TBW = 60 kg x 0.5 • 30 kg 30 Litres • Her symptoms are mild • 3% loss of TBW = 0.9 liters • IV NS at 60 ml/hour for 8 hours, then NS at 30 ml/hour for 16 hours, then discontinue.
Water requirements • Average healthy adult requires 2.5 L water/day. • GI losses – 200 mL • Insensible losses (respiration, perspiration) – 800 mL • Urine – 1.5 L (Caution: check for renal failure)
Increased requirements • Fever • Sweating • GI • Vomiting • Diarrhea • NG suction
Decreased requirements • Anuria / oliguria • Syndrome of Inappropriate ADH (SIADH) • CHF
4/2/1 Rule – Maintenance Water • First 10 kg - 4 ml/kg/hour • Second 10 kg – 2 ml/kg/hour • For each kg over 20 kg – 1 ml/kg/hour • Or for those over 20 kg: • 60 ml/hour + ((kg-20)x1)
Maintenance Electrolytes • Sodium • 3 mEq/kg/day • Potassium • 1 mEq/kg/day
Fluid (4/2/1) • 4: 10 kg x 4 = 40 • 2: 2nd 10 kg x 2 = 20 • 1: (50kg – 20) x 1 = 30 • Total 40 + 20 + 30 = 90 ml/hour • 90 ml/hour x 24 hours = 2,160 ml/day • Or 2.16 Litres
Electrolytes - Sodium • Na+ = 3 mEq/kg/day • 50 kg x 3 = 150 mEq/day • 150 mEq/day 2.16 L/day = 69 mEq/L • Per litre this patient requires 69 mEq/L of sodium.
Electrolytes - Potassium • K+ = 1 mEq/kg/day • 50 kg x 1 = 50 mEq/day • 50 mEq/day 2.16 L/day = 23 mEq/L • Per litre this patient requires 23 mEq/L of potassium.
Overall requirements • Fluid: 2.26 Litres = 90 ml/hour • Sodium: 69 mEq/L • Potassium: 23 mEq/L • Look at the chart of IV solutions on page 2 of your handout. • The best matches is 0.45 NS with 77 mEq/L of sodium.
The order would look like this: • “IV 0.45 NS with 20 mEq KCl/L at 90 mL/hr”
Gastric Losses • Nasogastric tube • Emesis • D5 0.45 NS with 20 mEq/L potassium chloride (KCl)
Diarrhea • D5 Ringer’s Lactate with 15 mEq/L KCl • Use body weight as a replacement guide (1 kg = 1 litre) • An order for daily weights will help.
Blood Loss • Packed Red Blood Cells (PRBC) Type & Matched • Assess Platelets, INR, and Calcium • Stop anticoagulant medications • Consider Vitamin K (if on warfarin) • Consider replacing clotting factors • Fresh Frozen Plasma (FFP) • May need factor VII in the event of severe bleeding • Consider replacing Platelets
Rate of replacement • Depends on rate of loss. • Rapid losses require more frequent measurement and adjustment of infusion rate. • E.g., Measure NG losses Q2H and replace with IV D5 0.45 NS with 20 mEq/L KCl over the next 2 hours, Reassess in A.M.
So remember: • Deficit Fluids • Maintenance Fluids • Ongoing Losses
The best way to learn: • Practice, practice, practice. • Attempt the questions on page 3 of your handout.
And have fun! Thank you.