IV fluids & electrolytes & tranfusions Flashcards

1
Q

when would you not use 0.9% saline as fluid replacement?

A
  • ↑ Na+ or ↓ glucose: give 5% dextrose instead
  • ascitic: give human-A- solution (HAS) instead (A- maintains oncotic P, and the Na+ content of saline worsens)
  • ↓ BP<90 shocked: gelofusine (colloid) (has high osmotic content so stays IV)
  • shocked from bleeding: blood transfusion
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2
Q

where to begin when assessing fluid replacement needs?

A

HR, BP, urine output

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3
Q

fluid replacement if ↑ HR or ↓ BP?

A

500ml bolus immediately

(250ml if HF)

then reassess HR, BP, urine output

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4
Q

fluid replacement if only ↓ urine output?
(solely oliguria)
(and not due to BPH)

A

1 litre over 2-4 hrs

reassess HR, BP, urine output

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5
Q

define:

1) anuria

2) oliguria

A

1) 0 ml/hr

2) < 30 ml/hr

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6
Q

predictions of fluid depletion if:

1) ↓ urine output
2) ↓ urine output and ↑ HR
3) ↓ urine output and ↑ HR and shocked (↓ BP)

A

1) 500 ml
2) 1 litre
3) >2 litres

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7
Q

what is the limit to quantity of fluid to prescribe to sick patient?

A

> 2 litres

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8
Q

what does symbol ° mean?

A

number of hours over which a bag of fluid should be given, e.g. 0.9% saline 1 L 2° means 1 L of 0.9% saline over 2 h

in PSA write “2 hours” or “2-hourly” or “2-hrly”

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9
Q

maintenance dose of fluids that adults need over 24 hours?

elderly?

A

3 litres, 2 sweet, 1 salty

  • firstly, 1 litre 0.9% NaCl + 20mmol KCl over 8 hours
  • then 1 litre 5% dextrose + 20mmol KCl over 8 hours
  • again 1 litre 5% dextrose + 20mmol KCl over 8 hours

elderly or very underweight - 2 litres

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10
Q

daily K+ requirements?

A
40mmol KCl (20mmol KCl in two bags)
(IV K+ shouldn't be given at more than 10mmol/hr)
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11
Q

IRL - how to assess pt before giving fluids?

A
  • check patient’s U+E
  • check not fluid overloaded (↑ JVP, peripheral and pulmonary oedema)
  • ensure bladder not palpable (signifies urinary obstruction)
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12
Q

if a patient if hypovolaemic - what do you give?

A

500ml 0.9% NaCl over 15 mins

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13
Q

what to give if a patient is ↓ glucose or ↑ Na+?

A

5% glucose

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14
Q

how much is the maintenance fluid requirement of a 70kg adult?

A

25-30ml/kg per day
so 25 x 70 = 1750
so round it up to two 12 hourly one litre bags

(if they needed 3 litres, 3 x 8 hourly bags)

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15
Q

IMPORTANT what is the max rate of K+ infusion?

A

10mmol/hr

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16
Q

what’s the mmol/kg for addition of KCl or NaCl?

A

1mmol/kg

80kg = 80mmol/24 hours

17
Q

1) how to approach fluid resuscitation?
2) what to give?
3) when to call for help?

A

1) check for causes in Hx/Ex
- D, V, syncope, fluid intake, polyuria, fever, hyperventilation, drain, thirst

2) 500ml 0.9% fluid bolus (250ml if renal impairment/frail/cardiac) <15 mins
3) reassess and repeat <2000ml and CALL FOR HELP if shock or if persistent hypovolaemia even after 2 litres given

18
Q

how is insulin given/route?

A

S/C (not IV!)

19
Q

define acute severe ↑hyperkalaemia?

A

> 6.5 mmol/l or in the presence of ECG changes

20
Q

Tx acute severe ↑hyperkalaemia? (4)

A

1) 10-20ml calcium gluconate 10% by slow IV injection (cardioprotective)
2) 10 units actrapid IV
3) 100ml of 20% IV dextrose
4) nebulised salbutamol 10mg

21
Q

causes ↓hypokalaemia?

“DIRE”

A

D - diuretics (loop, thiazide)
I - inadequate intake or intestinal loss
R - renal tubular acidosis
E - endocrine (Cushings/Conns)

22
Q

causes ↑hyperkalaemia? (4)

“DREAD”

A
D - diuretics (ACEi + K+ sparing)
R - renal failure
E - endocrine (Addison's)
A - artefact
D - DKA
23
Q

if someone has ↓↓↓↓ BP, what do you give first?

A

fluids FIRST stat

then consider blood transfusion

24
Q

when to transfuse a patient with Fe def anaemia? (2)

A

1) if severely Sx, eg angina, and can’t wait for Fe replacement to kick in
2) Hb <70g/L

25
how much does Hb usually rise per week on Fe replacement therapy?
10/g/L/week
26
how long to give oral Fe for ↓Hb?
until Hb is normal | then 3 months thereafter
27
Tx AKI?
cannula + catheter, fluid monitoring IV fluid 500ml stat, 1 litre 4 hrly cause: bloods, ABG, DHx, US kidneys, urinalysis check for life threatening complication: 1) pulmonary oedema/fluid overload 2) ↑K+ 3) acidosis
28
what to write as insulin prescription for acute ↑K+?
"10 units Actrapid in 100ml of 20% dextrose, over 30 min" | IV
29
effect of LMWH on K+?
Dalteparin (and all heparins) can contribute to hyperkalaemia
30
some drugs that ↓Na+?
bendroflumethiazide | citalopram (SSRIs) -SIADH
31
what fluids to give patient who has received 2L bags of NaCl 0.9% in 24 hours, with 20mmol K+ in each, is NBM, 80kg, and normoglyaemic?
glucose 5%/potassium chloride 0.3% solution - risk of NaCl overload - 154 mmol Na and Cl in each bag (80 kg = 80 mmol/day - requires K+ (only 40mmol; requires 80mmol for maintainence) - normoglycaemic and euvolaemic; hydrate using 5% glucose - 2000–2400 mL/day (80-100 mL/h) - the ideal infusion rate is 1 L over 8-12 h using a bag containing 0.3% (40 mmol/L) potassium
32
how to ensure 40mmol/litre K+ in 12 hours?
infuse 1 L over 8-12 h using a bag containing 0.3% (40 mmol/L) potassium (diluted by 10 - KCl 3% 40mmol/100ml 100ml bag)
33
if recovering from AKI, fluid output (6 litres) is double input (3 litres), only able to tolerate 500ml oral intake, Na+ is higher end of normal and K+ is a little low?
- as part of recovery, patients may enter a ‘polyuric phase’ in which their urine output increases and fuid input may not keep pace, resulting in dehydration and electrolyte abnormalities - urine output exceeding 200mL/h should always prompt consideration of this 1 simple rule: input should be similar to output (allowing 10–15% difference) - if 250mL/hour (6L in 24 hours), oral intake of 500mL is inadequate - low K+ and Na+ at the upper end of normal - THEREFORE 5% dextrose with 20mmol KCl - patient is losing 1L every 4hours (24/6) - input should match, so a 1L bag over 4hours best
34
patient admitted to hospital 7 hours after an acute stroke, unwell for 2 days and eating and drinking less than usual, PMH -HT (on ramipril), alert, dysphasic and has a right hemiparesis, unable to swallow and does not tolerate insertion of a nasogastric tube. ``` Na+ 144 mmol/L (137–144) K+ 3.9 mmol/L (3.5–4.9) U 7.5 mmol/L (2.5–7.0) Cr 85 µmol/L (60–110) Random plasma glucose 7.2 mmol/L ``` ONE IV fluid that is most appropriate for the patient at this stage?
- sodium chloride 0.9%/potassium chloride 0.15% solution - 500 mL over 4-6 h or 1 L over 8-12 h. **faster dangerous (K+ in this bag) - 15% KCl is 20mmol/10ml - therefore 0.15% KCl is 0.2mmol/10ml (so 20mmol would be a 1 litre bag) * ***WHY NaCl even though Na+ high?? - patient is unable to hydrate or nourish themselves, so requires maintenance IV water, electrolytes and nutrition - patient may be fluid depleted (not been eating and drinking for 2 days) (causes ↑ Na+ and urea, but BP and HR okay) - NaCl is a major component in initial IV fluid Tx to maintain extracellular volume and make up for any deficit - should contain K+ as well (1 mmol/kg/day) - no need for rapid fluid replacement as the patient is not in need of resuscitation ***WHY NOT GLUCOSE? Patient will require some nutritional support (glucose) in the first 24 hrs. BUT, glucose-containing fluids have the potential to EXACERBATE cerebral injury (so this would not be a good choice of initial fluid replacement (the current glucose is elevated)
35
when is compensation for potassium loss is especially necessary?
- digoxin or anti-arrhythmic drugs (↓ K+ may induce arrhythmias) - secondary hyperaldosteronism (↑aldosterone AND ↑ renin): - RAS, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome, severe HF - excessive losses of K+ in the faeces, e.g. chronic D associated with intestinal malabsorption or laxative abuse
36
Alcohol dependent patient is disorientated, irritable and confused. Temperature 37.3°C, HR 104/min and rhythm regular, BP 116/86 mmHg, O2 sat 98% breathing air. Jaundiced, marked tremor of the hands. Abdominal examination reveals 3 cm tender hepatomegaly with no evidence of shifting dullness on percussion. ``` ↓ Na+ 133 mmol/L (137–144) ↑ K+ 3.7 mmol/L (3.5–4.9) ↑ U 2.6 mmol/L (2.5–7.0) Cr 76 µmol/L (60–110) ↓ albumin 28 g/L (37–49) ↑ bili 86 µmol/L (1–22) ↑ ALT 450 U/L (5–35) ↑ ALP 188 U/L (45–105) BM 5.1 mmol/L. ```
- vitamin B substances with ascorbic acid (Pabrinex® I/V High Potency) 2 pairs (10 mL) by IV infusion over 30 mins 8-hrly - prophylactic for Wernicke’s encephalopathy * ***Why not NaCl +/- KCl?? - eg potassium chloride 0.3%/sodium chloride 0.9% infusion 1 L IV over 2 h - would provide an excessive rate of delivery of K+ and this Na+ load would be unwise in a patient with impaired liver function
37
drugs that ↑K+?
spirinolactone (and amiloride) ACEi ARBs trimeth NSAIDs ciclosporin
38
drugs that cause ↓K+?
thiazide loop laxatives salbutamol ``` theophyll steroids mineralocorticoids aminoglyc amphotericin B insulin liquorice ```
39
drugs causing ↓Na+
thiazide loop ARBs ACEi ``` carbamaza PPIs SSRIs sulfonylurea venlafaxine ```