McNab Sarah, Ware Robert S, Neville Kristen A, Choong Karen, Coulthard Mark G, Duke Trevor, Davidson Andrew, Dorofaeff Tavey
c/o Centre for International Child Health, Royal Children's Hospital, Flemington Rd, Parkville, VIC, 3052, Australia.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Dec 18;2014(12):CD009457. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009457.pub2.
Maintenance intravenous fluids are frequently used in hospitalised children who cannot maintain adequate hydration through enteral intake. Traditionally used hypotonic fluids have been associated with hyponatraemia and subsequent morbidity and mortality. Use of isotonic fluid has been proposed to reduce complications.
To establish and compare the risk of hyponatraemia by systematically reviewing studies where isotonic is compared with hypotonic intravenous fluid for maintenance purposes in children.Secondly, to compare the risk of hypernatraemia, the effect on mean serum sodium concentration and the rate of attributable adverse effects of both fluid types in children.
We ran the search on 17 June 2013. We searched the Cochrane Injuries Group Specialised Register, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL, The Cochrane Library), MEDLINE (OvidSP), Embase (OvidSP), and ISI Web of Science. We also searched clinical trials registers and screened reference lists. We updated this search in October 2014 but these results have not yet been incorporated.
We included randomised controlled trials that compared isotonic versus hypotonic intravenous fluids for maintenance hydration in children.
At least two authors assessed and extracted data for each trial. We presented dichotomous outcomes as risk ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) and continuous outcomes as mean differences with 95% CIs.
Ten studies met the inclusion criteria, with a total of 1106 patients. The majority of the studies were performed in surgical or intensive care populations (or both). There was considerable variation in the composition of intravenous fluid, particularly hypotonic fluid, used in the studies. There was a low risk of bias for most of the included studies. Ten studies provided data for our primary outcome, a total of 449 patients in the analysis received isotonic fluid, while 521 received hypotonic fluid. Those who received isotonic fluid had a substantially lower risk of hyponatraemia (17% versus 34%; RR 0.48; 95% CI 0.38 to 0.60, high quality evidence). It is unclear whether there is an increased risk of hypernatraemia when isotonic fluids are used (4% versus 3%; RR 1.24; 95% CI 0.65 to 2.38, nine studies, 937 participants, low quality evidence), although the absolute number of patients developing hypernatraemia was low. Most studies had safety restrictions included in their methodology, preventing detailed investigation of serious adverse events.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Isotonic intravenous maintenance fluids with sodium concentrations similar to that of plasma reduce the risk of hyponatraemia when compared with hypotonic intravenous fluids. These results apply for the first 24 hours of administration in a wide group of primarily surgical paediatric patients with varying severities of illness.
维持性静脉输液常用于因肠内摄入无法维持充足水合作用的住院儿童。传统使用的低渗液与低钠血症及随后的发病和死亡有关。有人提议使用等渗液以减少并发症。
通过系统评价比较等渗液与低渗静脉输液用于儿童维持性输液的研究,确定并比较低钠血症的风险。其次,比较两种液体类型在儿童中导致高钠血症的风险、对平均血清钠浓度的影响以及可归因的不良反应发生率。
我们于2013年6月17日进行检索。检索了Cochrane损伤组专业注册库、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL,Cochrane图书馆)、MEDLINE(OvidSP)、Embase(OvidSP)和ISI科学网。我们还检索了临床试验注册库并筛选了参考文献列表。我们于2014年10月更新了此检索,但这些结果尚未纳入。
我们纳入了比较等渗与低渗静脉输液用于儿童维持性水合作用的随机对照试验。
至少两名作者对每个试验进行评估并提取数据。我们将二分结果表示为风险比(RR)及95%置信区间(CI),将连续结果表示为平均差及95%CI。
10项研究符合纳入标准,共1106例患者。大多数研究在外科或重症监护人群(或两者)中进行。研究中使用的静脉输液成分,特别是低渗液,存在相当大的差异。大多数纳入研究的偏倚风险较低。10项研究提供了我们主要结局的数据,分析中共有449例患者接受等渗液,521例接受低渗液。接受等渗液的患者发生低钠血症的风险显著较低(17%对34%;RR 0.48;95%CI 0.38至0.60,高质量证据)。使用等渗液时高钠血症风险是否增加尚不清楚(4%对3%;RR 1.24;95%CI 0.65至2.38,9项研究,937名参与者,低质量证据),尽管发生高钠血症的患者绝对数量较少。大多数研究在其方法中包含安全限制,妨碍了对严重不良事件的详细调查。
与低渗静脉输液相比,钠浓度与血浆相似的等渗静脉维持液可降低低钠血症风险。这些结果适用于一大组病情严重程度各异的主要外科儿科患者给药的最初24小时。