Pringle Kimberly, Shah Sachita P, Umulisa Irenee, Mark Munyaneza Richard B, Dushimiyimana Jean Marie, Stegmann Katrina, Musavuli Juvenal, Ngabitsinze Protegene, Stulac Sara, Levine Adam C
Department of Emergency Medicine, Brown University Alpert Medical School, Providence, RI, USA.
Int J Emerg Med. 2011 Sep 9;4:58. doi: 10.1186/1865-1380-4-58.
Dehydration due to acute gastroenteritis is one of the leading causes of mortality in children worldwide. The World Health Organization (WHO) scale, the Gorelick scale, and the Clinical Dehydration Scale (CDS) were created to estimate percentage dehydration in children with gastroenteritis based on clinical signs. Of these, only the CDS has been prospectively validated against a valid gold standard, though never in low- and middle-income countries. The purpose of this study is to determine whether these clinical scales can accurately assess dehydration status in children when performed by nurses or general physicians in a low-income country.
We prospectively enrolled a non-consecutive sample of children presenting to three Rwandan hospitals with diarrhea and/or vomiting. A health care provider documented clinical signs on arrival and weighed the patient using a standard scale. Once admitted, the patient received rehydration according to standard hospital protocol and was weighed again at hospital discharge. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were created for each of the three scales compared to the gold standard, percent weight change with rehydration. Sensitivity, specificity, and likelihood ratios were calculated based on the best cutoff points of the ROC curves.
We enrolled 73 children, and 49 children met eligibility criteria. Based on our gold standard, the children had a mean percent dehydration of 5% on arrival. The WHO scale, Gorelick scale, and CDS did not have an area under the ROC curve statistically different from the reference line. The WHO scale had sensitivities of 79% and 50% and specificities of 43% and 61% for severe and moderate dehydration, respectively; the 4- and 10-point Gorelick scale had sensitivities of 64% and 21% and specificities of 69% and 89%, respectively, for severe dehydration, while the same scales had sensitivities of 68% and 82% and specificities of 41% and 35% for moderate dehydration; the CDS had a sensitivity of 68% and specificity of 45% for moderate dehydration.
In this sample of children, the WHO scale, Gorelick scale, and CDS did not provide an accurate assessment of dehydration status when used by general physicians and nurses in a developing world setting.
急性肠胃炎导致的脱水是全球儿童死亡的主要原因之一。世界卫生组织(WHO)量表、戈列克里克量表和临床脱水量表(CDS)旨在根据临床体征估算肠胃炎患儿的脱水百分比。其中,只有CDS经过了与有效金标准的前瞻性验证,不过从未在低收入和中等收入国家进行过验证。本研究的目的是确定在低收入国家由护士或普通医生操作这些临床量表时,能否准确评估儿童的脱水状态。
我们前瞻性纳入了卢旺达三家医院出现腹泻和/或呕吐症状的非连续儿童样本。医护人员记录患儿入院时的临床体征,并使用标准秤对其进行称重。患儿入院后,按照医院标准方案接受补液治疗,并在出院时再次称重。将三种量表与金标准(补液后体重变化百分比)进行比较,绘制每个量表的受试者工作特征(ROC)曲线。根据ROC曲线的最佳截断点计算敏感性、特异性和似然比。
我们纳入了73名儿童,其中49名儿童符合入选标准。根据我们的金标准,患儿入院时的平均脱水百分比为5%。WHO量表、戈列克里克量表和CDS的ROC曲线下面积与参考线无统计学差异。WHO量表对重度和中度脱水的敏感性分别为79%和50%,特异性分别为43%和61%;4分和10分的戈列克里克量表对重度脱水的敏感性分别为64%和21%,特异性分别为69%和89%,对中度脱水的敏感性分别为68%和82%,特异性分别为41%和35%;CDS对中度脱水的敏感性为68%,特异性为45%。
在这个儿童样本中,在发展中国家环境下由普通医生和护士使用时,WHO量表、戈列克里克量表和CDS均未对脱水状态提供准确评估。