Visvanathan Akila, Dennis Martin, Whiteley William
Medicine of the Elderly, NHS Lothian, Royal Victoria Building, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, UK, EH4 2XU.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Sep 1;2015(9):CD011138. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011138.pub2.
Parenteral fluids are commonly used in people with acute stroke with poor oral fluid intake. However, the balance between benefit and harm for different fluid regimens is unclear.
To assess whether different parenteral fluid regimens lead to differences in death, or death or dependence, after stroke based on fluid type, fluid volume, duration of fluid administration, and mode of delivery.
We searched the Cochrane Stroke Group Trials Register (May 2015), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR) and the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE) (Cochrane Library 2015, Issue 5), MEDLINE (2008 to May 2015), EMBASE (2008 to May 2015), and CINAHL (1982 to May 2015). We also searched ongoing trials registers (May 2015) and reference lists, performed cited reference searches, and contacted authors.
Randomised trials of parenteral fluid regimens in adults with ischaemic or haemorrhagic stroke within seven days of stroke onset that reported death or dependence.
One review author screened titles and abstracts. We obtained the full-text articles of relevant studies, and two review authors independently selected trials for inclusion and extracted data. We used Cochrane's tool for bias assessment.
We included 12 studies (2351 participants: range 27 to 841).Characteristics: The 12 included studies compared hypertonic (colloids) with isotonic fluids (crystalloids); of these, five studies (1420 participants) also compared 0.9% saline with another fluid. No data were available to make other comparisons. Delay from stroke to recruitment varied from less than 24 hours to 72 hours. Duration of fluid delivery was between two hours and 10 days.Bias assessment: Investigators and participants in eight of the 12 included studies were blind to treatment allocation, seven of the 12 included studies gave details of randomisation, and eight of the 12 included studies reported all outcomes measured.
There were no relevant completed trials that addressed the effect of volume, duration, or mode of fluid delivery on death or dependence in people with stroke.The odds of death or dependence were similar in participants allocated to colloids or crystalloid fluid regimens (odds ratio (OR) 0.97, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.79 to 1.21, five studies, I² = 58%, low-quality evidence), and between 0.9% saline or other fluid regimens (OR 1.04, 95% CI 0.82 to 1.32, three studies, I² = 71%, low-quality evidence). There was substantial heterogeneity in these estimates.The odds of death were similar between colloids and crystalloids (OR 1.02, 95% CI 0.82 to 1.27, 12 studies, I² = 24%, moderate-quality evidence), and 0.9% saline and other fluids (OR 0.87, 95% CI 0.67 to 1.12, five studies, I² = 53%, low-quality evidence). The odds of pulmonary oedema were higher in participants allocated to colloids (OR 2.34, 95% CI 1.28 to 4.29, I² = 0%). Although the studies observed a higher risk of cerebral oedema (OR 0.20, 95% CI 0.02 to 1.74) and pneumonia (OR 0.58, 95% CI 0.17 to 2.01) with crystalloids, we could not exclude clinically important benefits or harms.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found no evidence that colloids were associated with lower odds of death or dependence in the medium term after stroke compared with crystalloids, though colloids were associated with greater odds of pulmonary oedema. We found no evidence to guide the best volume, duration, or mode of parenteral fluid delivery for people with acute stroke.
对于经口液体摄入量少的急性中风患者,通常会使用肠外补液。然而,不同补液方案的利弊平衡尚不清楚。
基于补液类型、补液量、补液持续时间和给药方式,评估不同的肠外补液方案是否会导致中风后死亡、死亡或依赖方面的差异。
我们检索了Cochrane中风组试验注册库(2015年5月)、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、Cochrane系统评价数据库(CDSR)和效果评价文摘数据库(DARE)(Cochrane图书馆2015年第5期)、MEDLINE(2008年至2015年5月)、EMBASE(2008年至2015年5月)和CINAHL(1982年至2015年5月)。我们还检索了正在进行的试验注册库(2015年5月)和参考文献列表,进行了引用文献检索,并联系了作者。
中风发作7天内针对缺血性或出血性中风成人的肠外补液方案的随机试验,报告了死亡或依赖情况。
一位综述作者筛选标题和摘要。我们获取了相关研究的全文文章,两位综述作者独立选择纳入试验并提取数据。我们使用Cochrane偏倚评估工具。
我们纳入了12项研究(2351名参与者:范围为27至841名)。
纳入的12项研究将高渗液(胶体)与等渗液(晶体)进行了比较;其中,5项研究(1420名参与者)还将0.9%生理盐水与另一种液体进行了比较。没有数据可用于进行其他比较。从中风到纳入研究的时间间隔从不到24小时到72小时不等。补液持续时间在2小时至10天之间。
12项纳入研究中的8项研究的研究者和参与者对治疗分配不知情,12项纳入研究中的7项研究给出了随机化细节,12项纳入研究中的8项研究报告了所有测量的结局。
没有相关的完整试验涉及补液量、持续时间或给药方式对中风患者死亡或依赖的影响。
分配到胶体或晶体补液方案的参与者死亡或依赖的几率相似(比值比(OR)0.97,95%置信区间(CI)0.79至1.21,5项研究,I² = 58%,低质量证据),0.9%生理盐水或其他补液方案之间也是如此(OR 1.04,95% CI 0.82至1.32,3项研究,I² = 71%,低质量证据)。这些估计值存在很大异质性。
胶体和晶体之间的死亡几率相似(OR 1.02,95% CI 0.82至1.27,12项研究,I² = 24%,中等质量证据),0.9%生理盐水和其他液体之间也是如此(OR 0.87,95% CI 0.67至1.12,5项研究,I² = 53%,低质量证据)。分配到胶体的参与者发生肺水肿的几率更高(OR 2.34,95% CI 1.28至4.29,I² = 0%)。尽管研究观察到晶体补液方案导致脑水肿(OR 0.20,95% CI 0.02至1.74)和肺炎(OR 0.58,95% CI 0.17至2.01)的风险更高,但我们不能排除临床上重要的益处或危害。
我们没有发现证据表明与晶体相比,胶体在中风后中期与较低的死亡或依赖几率相关,尽管胶体与更高的肺水肿几率相关。我们没有证据指导急性中风患者最佳的肠外补液量、持续时间或给药方式。