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Fluid and Electrolyte
Management in Surgery
Dr. Uko Emmanuel E
Surgical Registrar
OOUTH
OUTLINE
• Introduction
• Distribution of body water
and electrolytes
• Normal fluid and
electrolyte balance
• Disorders in fluid and
electrolyte balance and
causes
– Volume disturbances
• 3rd
space fluid loss
– Concentration
disturbances
• Na+
balance
– Composition
disturbances
• K+, Ca2+,
Mg2+
and
acid base balance
• Fluid and electrolyte
therapy
• Errors in fluid therapy
• Complications with
intravenous infusion
• Conclusion
• References
Introduction
• Fluid and electrolyte management
– Important part of the perioperative management
of the surgical patient
– Critical role in the attenuation of metabolic
response to surgery and trauma in patients
• Understanding the daily exchanges of water
and electrolytes is essential in
– maintaining normal concentration of body fluids
and electrolytes
– normal pH
– correct fluid and electrolyte deficits.
Distribution of body water and
electrolytes
• Total Body Water (TBW)
• 60% of body weight (adult male)
• 50% of body weight (adult women and older men)
• 45% of body weight (older women)
• In general TBW depends on Age, sex, and
degree of obesity
• TBW
• Intracellular –40% (⅔)of TBW = 28L
• Extracellular – 20% (⅓) of TBW = 14L
• Intravascular (plasma) – 4% TBW = 1%
• Extravascular – 16% TBW
• Interstitial – 15% of body weight = 11%
• Transcellular – 1% of body weight = 0.7L
• In Children
• 75 – 80% at birth, decreases steadily to 65% at 1yr
• ECF – 35% at birth, decreases to 20% at 2yrs
• ICF – changes minimally
Normal fluid and electrolyte balance
Daily fluid requirements
Water loss Tropics
(ml)
Temperate region
(ml)
Pulmonary and cutaneous 1,700 1,000
Urine 1,500 1,500
Faeces 200 200
Total 3,400 2,700
Water Gains
Endogenous production
from metabolism
200 200
Net requirement 3,200 2,500
Surgical patient- 3,000ml
Pyrexia- 10
C→
2.5mL/kg/day to
insensible losses
Electrolyte distribution in body fluids
compartments
Ion Intravascular
mmol/L
Interstitial
mmol/L
Intracellular
mmol/L
Na 140 143 8
K 4 4 140
Ca2+
1.25 0.625 1
Mg 0.7 – 0.9 0.75 15
Cl 95 – 105 115 8
HCO3
-
24 – 27 30 14
PO4
3-
0.8 – 1.4 1.6 25.8
Protein 2 0 9
SO4
2-
1 1 20
Organic acids 3 3 -
Electrolyte distribution in body fluids
Sodium Tropics
(mmol)
Temperate
(mmol)
Urine 114 80-110
Sweat 10-16
Faeces 10 10
Total 130-140 90-120
Potassium Tropics
mmol
Temperate
mmol
Urine 50 60
Sweat Negligible Negligible
Faeces 10 10
Total 60 70
Disorders in fluid balances
• Classified into:
1. Disturbances of volume – due to loss or addition
of isotonic salt solution
2. Disturbances of concentration – due to addition
or loss of water from the ECF or
depletion/addition of Na+
from the ECF
3. Disturbances of composition:– largely K, Ca, Mg
1. Volume changes
•ECF volume deficit is the most common fluid disorder
in surgical patients.
•Excess or deficit of ECF volume can be diagnosed by
estimating the blood urea nitrogen (BUN)
•BUN rises with sufficient ECF deficit
•The acute loss of an isotonic extracellular fluid like the
intestinal juice results in significant decrease in the ECF
VOLUME and little if any change in the ICF.
• The internal fluid shifts are termed Distributional
changes and they create a “Third fluid space”
resulting in the contraction of the Functional
extracellular fluid volume (FECFV)
• Severe volume deficits lead to signs and symptoms
in the CNS & CVS.
• With progressive losses --------> hypovolaemic shock.
Seen in :
• Losses from the GIT due to vomiting, NG suction,
diarrhoea and fistula drainage
• Sequestration of fluid in soft tissue injuries and
infections
• Intra-abdominal and retroperitoneal inflammatory
processes
• Peritonitis
• Intestinal obstruction
• Burns
Clinical features
• Dry skin, loss of skin turgor.
• Dry mouth.
• Sunken eyes
• Collapsed peripheral veins.
• Tachycardia.
• Scanty concentrated urine.
• HB & Blood urea are increased
Treatment
•Intravenous crystalloids.
•Correct shock- ringer’s lactate, blood
•Choice determined by cause of dehydration.
•Monitoring.
•Urine output – 0.5-1ml/kg/hr (30 – 50ml/hr).,
2mls/kg/hr
•Serum electrolytes and urea.
Water intoxication
• Parental administration of hypotonic fluids more
than kidneys can excrete.
• Presence of cardiac, renal, hepatic disease.
Causes
• TURP syndrome.
• Colorectal washouts with water.
• Excessive intravenous fluids e.g. 5% glucose
• SIADH
Clinical features
•weight gain
•Added breath sounds
•C.V.P > 15cm of H2O
•CCF when severe
Treatment
•Prevention
•Stop IV fluid
•Diuretics
•Mannitol (1gm/kg)
2. Concentration changes
Osmolarity
•Osmolarity – number of osmotically active particles
per litre of solvent
•ECF and ICF contain different types of solute but
concentration of solutes inside and outside the cells are
equal
•Sodium salts, glucose and urea – responsible for most
of the solute particles in the ECF
•Sodium ions account for 90%
• Measurement – Osmometer
• Plasma Osmolarity
Posm = 2 X Plasma Na+
+ Glucose + BUN
18 2.8
2 – no of anions accompanying Na+
18 and 2.8 – correction factors in converting Glucose and
Urea conc. from mg/dl to mmol/L
•Hypo and hypernatraemia can be diagnosed clinically
but the signs and symptoms are not generally present
until derangement is severe.
•With rapid rate of change, the signs and symptoms
tend to occur early and with greater severity
Hyponatremia
•Defined as serum [Na+] less than 135 mEq/L
•Water shifts into cells causing cerebral edema
•125 mEq/L – nausea and malaise
•120 mEq/L – headache, lethargy, obtundation
•115 mEq/L – seizure and coma
Characterised by :
• CNS signs of increased intracranial pressure and
tissue signs of excessive intracellular water
• Hypertension induced by the rise in ICP
• BP usually returns to normal after correction of Na+
level
• With severe hyponatraemia
– rapid development of oliguric renal failure
– irreversible with delayed therapy.
Classifications, aetiology and treatment of Hyponatremia
Hyper-osmotic, Iso-smotic, Hypo-osmotic
Hyperosmotic and Isosmotic Hyponatremia are due
to excessive solutes in plasma.
Hyperosmotic
–Hyperglycemia
• Each 100 mg/dl of glucose reduces [Na+]
by 1.6 mEq/l
–Hypertonic Infusions
• Glycerol
• Mannitol
• Glycine
– Treat underlying cause
 Hypo-osmotic Hyponatremia
Hypovolemic, Euvolemic and Hypervolemic
– Hypovolemic – most common cause
• Excessive renal (diuretic) or GI (emesis, diarrhea) losses
• Asymptomatic – fluid resuscitate with isotonic saline
• Symptomatic or plasma [Na+] less than 110 mEq/L
– Calculate Na+ deficit = 0.6 x wt(kg) x (desired [Na] –
actual [Na]
– Correct at a rate no greater than 0.5 mEq/L/hour or
12 mEq/L/day
Hypernatremia
• Defined as serum [Na+] greater than 145 mEq/L
Clinical features:
• Lethargy, weakness, and irritability that progress to
seizure, coma, and death
Classifications, aetiology and treatment of
Hypernatremia
• Hypovolemic – loss of hypotonic fluids
– Diuresis, vomiting, diarrhea
– Replace the free water deficit
– 0.6 x weight (kg) x ([Na+]/140 -1)
• Hypervolemic – gain of hypertonic fluids
– Hypertonic saline administration
– Diuretics (lasix) to excrete sodium in urine
combined with hypotonic saline for partial volume
replacement
3. Composition changes
• Abnormalities of composition of major importance
are changes of
– potassium
– calcium
– magnesium
– changes in Acid-base balance.
Potassium
• Major cation of intracellular water – 98% at
concentration of 150mEq/L
• Normal dietary intake – 50-100mEq/day
• Severe injury, surgical stress, acidosis and catabolic
state can result in the release of significant amount
from the intracellular space into the extracellular
space
Hyperkalaemia (>5.5mmol/l)
• Signs limited to the CVS and GIT
• GIT symptoms – nausea, vomiting, intermittent
intestinal colic and diarrhoea
• CVS signs apparent on ECG –
– Tall peaked T waves
– Widened QRS complex
– Depressed ST segments
UKO FLUID AND ELECTROLYTE MANAGEMENT IN SURGERY 1.ppt
UKO FLUID AND ELECTROLYTE MANAGEMENT IN SURGERY 1.ppt
Hypokalaemia (<3.5mmol/l)
• Due to excessive renal excretion of K+
• Prolonged administration of K+
free parenteral fluids
with continued obligatory renal loss of K+
(>20mEq/day)
• Parenteral nutrition with inadequate K+
replacement
• Loss of GIT secretions
• Hyperthroidism, B-adrenergics, insulin,alkalosis
Hypokalaemia
Signs
• Failure of normal contractility of skeletal, smooth
and cardiac muscles i.e. weakness leading to flaccid
paralysis, diminished/absent tendon reflexes and
paralytic ileus
• ECG signs – arrhythmias, low voltage ECG, flat T
waves and depressed ST segments
Treatment
• Prevention i.e. replace GIT fluid loss volume for
volume
• K deficit(mmol) = (desired – actual)x 0.6 x wt(kg)
• Give K+
not more than 40mEq/L of fluid
• Rate not exceeding 20mEq/hour
• Don’t give oliguric patients and post op patient
within 24hrs post surgery
Calcium
• Majority of Calcium in the body is in the form of PO4
3-
and CO3
2-
• Normal daily intake : 1 – 3g/day
• ≥ 200mg excreted in the urine daily, the rest is lost in
the GIT
• Half of the serum calcium exists in unionised form
bound to plasma proteins
• 45% exists in ionised form and is responsible for
neuromuscular stability
• Acidosis increases the ionised fraction while alkalosis
decreases it
• Disturbances of calcium metabolism are generally
not problematic in the postoperative patient
• Therefore, routine administration of Ca2+
to the
surgical patient is not needed in the absence of
specific indications
Hypocalcaemia
• Serum levels < 8mg/100ml
• Features –
– Circumoral numbness
– Numbness of fingers and toes
– Hyperactive tendon reflexes
– +ve Chvostek’s sign
– Tetany, carpopedal spasms
– Convulsions (with severe deficits)
– Prolonged Q-T interval on the ECG
Hypocalcaemia
Causes
• Acute pancreatitis
• Massive soft tissue infections – necrotising fascitis
• ARF and CRF
• Pancreatic and small bowel fistulas
• Hypoparathyroidism
• Severe depletion of magnesium
Give Calcium salts – gluconate and chloride – IV ,
- lactate – orally
Correct underlying cause and the deficit
Hypercalcaemia
• Symptoms
– Easy fatigability
– Lassitude
– Weakness
– Anorexia, nausea and vomiting
– Weight loss
In severe cases
- lassitude, somnambulism, stupor, coma
- Headaches, skeletal pains, thirst, polydipsia,
polyuria
Hypercalcaemia
Causes
• Hyperparathyroidism
• Cancer with bony metastasis e.g. Breast Ca
Treatment
• Inorganic PO4
3-
given IV/orally lowers Ca2+
levels
• Large doses of furosemide
• Prevention is the main treatment of hypercalcaemia
due to metastatic cancer
– Low calcium diet, adequate hydration to promote
urinary excretion of Ca2+
Magnesium
• Total body content – 2000mEq
• Half of this is in bone
• Distribution similar to potassium – mostly
intracellular
• Serum concentration between 1.5 –2.5mEq/L
• Normal dietary intake – 20mEq/day
• Largely excreted in the faeces
Magnesium
Deficiency
• Seen in starvation, malabsorption syndromes, GIT
losses, parenteral nutrition, acute pancreatitis, DKA
during treatment , primary aldosteronism and
chronic alcoholism
Symptoms and signs similar to hypocalcaemia
Treatment
• Parenteral MgSO4 or MgCl2 solution
• Monitor HR, BP, respiratory rate and ECG with large
doses
• Never to be given in the phase of oliguria or severe
volume deficit to avoid toxicity
Excess – rare but seen in renal insufficiency
- Correct acidosis
- Correct pre existing ECF volume deficit
-Withhold exogenous Mg2+
Fluid and Electrolyte Therapy
Parenteral solutions –
• Vary in composition to satisfy various fluid
requirements in the surgical patient.
• Given a situation, a typical fluid will correct the
abnormalities with minimal demands on the kidneys.
• The choice of a particular fluid depends on the
volume status of the patient and the type of
concentration or compositional abnormality present.
Maintenance of balance by
1.Normal daily requirement
2.Replacement of loss (due to disease or surgery or
both)
•Normal fluid requirement:
In the tropics: 3 litres/24 hrs:
(1 L N/S + 2 L of 5% D/w)
In temperate regions: 2.5 L/24 hrs (0.5 L N/S + 2 L 5%
D/w
• Electrolytes: daily requirements
• 1.5 – 2.3 grams of sodium/day/adult (2.3 grams
equivalent to one teaspoonful of salt
• This is equiv to 1.5 mmol–2.3 mmol
• N/saline = 154 mmol/litre !
• Using body weight - 100ml/kg for 1st
10 kg.
+ 50ml/kg for 2nd
10 kg.
+ 25ml/kg for each subsequent kg. > 20
•Determinations using body wt over-estimate
needs in obese pts and under-estimate in thin
pts
•Also by fluid shifts that accompany onset of
anabolism
–For adults [rough estimate]
•30-35ml/kg/day
For maintenance, give:
4.3% dex-in-0.18 saline
Osmolality = 300
For both children and adults
Fluid & electrolyte therapy for different surgical
conditions:
1.Dehydration (vomiting, diarrhoea, faecal fistula):
• N/s only
only until urine output normal
• Then,
Then, maintenance fluid
2.Shock: same as above
3. Gastric outlet obstruction:
• Fluid of choice in goo is N/saline, not ringer’s
lactate (b/cos in goo, there is alkalosis. Ringer’s
lactate will worsen it)
• In resuscitation
• Use ringer’s lactate or N/s
• Ringer’s lactate is better than N/s
• NORMAL URINE OUTPUT = 30-50ml/hr (0.5 ml–1
ml/kg/hr) = NORMAL TISSUE PERFUSION=ADEQUATE
RESUSCITATION
• 5%, 10%, 50% dextrose; darrows:
• 5% dex post-op = protein-sparing
• 10% dex = augment liver storage
• 50% dextrose = hypoglycamia
• Darrows = augment potassium
Composition of Parenteral Fluids (mEq/L)
Fluid Na+ K+ Ca2+ Cl- HCO3- CHO pH
ECF 142 4 5 103 27 7.4
LR 130 4 2.7 109 28 6.5
0.9%(0.45) NaCl 154(77) 154(77) 4.5
4.3% D/S
.2% NaCl 30 30 4.5
3%(5) NaCl 513(855) 513(855) 4.5
5% Albumin 145 7.4
Badoe’s 43.3 16 1.3 51.7 9
Errors in fluid therapy
 5% Dex in N/s is hypertonic. It has a diuretic effect
 5% Dex in water is hypotonic. In large volumes, will
cause cerebral oedema and hyponatraemia.
Treatment: diuretics, then N/saline
 Darrow's before adequate urine output – very
serious error!
 Ringer’s lactate in alkalosis
 Starting fluid before blood is taken for blood
chemistry
Complications of intravenous fluid
therapy
• Thrombophlebitis
• Local sepsis
• Septicaemia
• Overloading
• Air embolism
Current trend
• ERAS protocol on fluid management
• PlasmaLyte
• Normosol
Conclusion
• Versatility in fluid management is a
prerequisite for successful management of
patients
References
• Baja’s principles and practice of surgery E.
A.Badoe .Et al 5th edition.
• Fluids and electrolyte metabolism Dr.O. A. Atoyebi,
(FMCS) Professor of surgery College registrar 2009
• Principles of fluid and electrolyte management in
surgery Prof G. U. Chianakwana FWACS, FRCS
(IRELAND) WASC update course 2019
• Bailey & love's short practice of surgery, 27th edition
edited by norman S. Williams, P. Ronan
o'connell, andrew mccaskie
THANK YOU

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UKO FLUID AND ELECTROLYTE MANAGEMENT IN SURGERY 1.ppt

  • 1. Fluid and Electrolyte Management in Surgery Dr. Uko Emmanuel E Surgical Registrar OOUTH
  • 2. OUTLINE • Introduction • Distribution of body water and electrolytes • Normal fluid and electrolyte balance • Disorders in fluid and electrolyte balance and causes – Volume disturbances • 3rd space fluid loss – Concentration disturbances • Na+ balance – Composition disturbances • K+, Ca2+, Mg2+ and acid base balance • Fluid and electrolyte therapy • Errors in fluid therapy • Complications with intravenous infusion • Conclusion • References
  • 3. Introduction • Fluid and electrolyte management – Important part of the perioperative management of the surgical patient – Critical role in the attenuation of metabolic response to surgery and trauma in patients
  • 4. • Understanding the daily exchanges of water and electrolytes is essential in – maintaining normal concentration of body fluids and electrolytes – normal pH – correct fluid and electrolyte deficits.
  • 5. Distribution of body water and electrolytes • Total Body Water (TBW) • 60% of body weight (adult male) • 50% of body weight (adult women and older men) • 45% of body weight (older women) • In general TBW depends on Age, sex, and degree of obesity
  • 6. • TBW • Intracellular –40% (⅔)of TBW = 28L • Extracellular – 20% (⅓) of TBW = 14L • Intravascular (plasma) – 4% TBW = 1% • Extravascular – 16% TBW • Interstitial – 15% of body weight = 11% • Transcellular – 1% of body weight = 0.7L • In Children • 75 – 80% at birth, decreases steadily to 65% at 1yr • ECF – 35% at birth, decreases to 20% at 2yrs • ICF – changes minimally
  • 7. Normal fluid and electrolyte balance Daily fluid requirements Water loss Tropics (ml) Temperate region (ml) Pulmonary and cutaneous 1,700 1,000 Urine 1,500 1,500 Faeces 200 200 Total 3,400 2,700 Water Gains Endogenous production from metabolism 200 200 Net requirement 3,200 2,500 Surgical patient- 3,000ml Pyrexia- 10 C→ 2.5mL/kg/day to insensible losses
  • 8. Electrolyte distribution in body fluids compartments Ion Intravascular mmol/L Interstitial mmol/L Intracellular mmol/L Na 140 143 8 K 4 4 140 Ca2+ 1.25 0.625 1 Mg 0.7 – 0.9 0.75 15 Cl 95 – 105 115 8 HCO3 - 24 – 27 30 14 PO4 3- 0.8 – 1.4 1.6 25.8 Protein 2 0 9 SO4 2- 1 1 20 Organic acids 3 3 -
  • 9. Electrolyte distribution in body fluids Sodium Tropics (mmol) Temperate (mmol) Urine 114 80-110 Sweat 10-16 Faeces 10 10 Total 130-140 90-120 Potassium Tropics mmol Temperate mmol Urine 50 60 Sweat Negligible Negligible Faeces 10 10 Total 60 70
  • 10. Disorders in fluid balances • Classified into: 1. Disturbances of volume – due to loss or addition of isotonic salt solution 2. Disturbances of concentration – due to addition or loss of water from the ECF or depletion/addition of Na+ from the ECF 3. Disturbances of composition:– largely K, Ca, Mg
  • 11. 1. Volume changes •ECF volume deficit is the most common fluid disorder in surgical patients. •Excess or deficit of ECF volume can be diagnosed by estimating the blood urea nitrogen (BUN) •BUN rises with sufficient ECF deficit •The acute loss of an isotonic extracellular fluid like the intestinal juice results in significant decrease in the ECF VOLUME and little if any change in the ICF.
  • 12. • The internal fluid shifts are termed Distributional changes and they create a “Third fluid space” resulting in the contraction of the Functional extracellular fluid volume (FECFV) • Severe volume deficits lead to signs and symptoms in the CNS & CVS. • With progressive losses --------> hypovolaemic shock.
  • 13. Seen in : • Losses from the GIT due to vomiting, NG suction, diarrhoea and fistula drainage • Sequestration of fluid in soft tissue injuries and infections • Intra-abdominal and retroperitoneal inflammatory processes • Peritonitis • Intestinal obstruction • Burns
  • 14. Clinical features • Dry skin, loss of skin turgor. • Dry mouth. • Sunken eyes • Collapsed peripheral veins. • Tachycardia. • Scanty concentrated urine. • HB & Blood urea are increased
  • 15. Treatment •Intravenous crystalloids. •Correct shock- ringer’s lactate, blood •Choice determined by cause of dehydration. •Monitoring. •Urine output – 0.5-1ml/kg/hr (30 – 50ml/hr)., 2mls/kg/hr •Serum electrolytes and urea.
  • 16. Water intoxication • Parental administration of hypotonic fluids more than kidneys can excrete. • Presence of cardiac, renal, hepatic disease. Causes • TURP syndrome. • Colorectal washouts with water. • Excessive intravenous fluids e.g. 5% glucose • SIADH
  • 17. Clinical features •weight gain •Added breath sounds •C.V.P > 15cm of H2O •CCF when severe
  • 19. 2. Concentration changes Osmolarity •Osmolarity – number of osmotically active particles per litre of solvent •ECF and ICF contain different types of solute but concentration of solutes inside and outside the cells are equal •Sodium salts, glucose and urea – responsible for most of the solute particles in the ECF •Sodium ions account for 90%
  • 20. • Measurement – Osmometer • Plasma Osmolarity Posm = 2 X Plasma Na+ + Glucose + BUN 18 2.8 2 – no of anions accompanying Na+ 18 and 2.8 – correction factors in converting Glucose and Urea conc. from mg/dl to mmol/L
  • 21. •Hypo and hypernatraemia can be diagnosed clinically but the signs and symptoms are not generally present until derangement is severe. •With rapid rate of change, the signs and symptoms tend to occur early and with greater severity
  • 22. Hyponatremia •Defined as serum [Na+] less than 135 mEq/L •Water shifts into cells causing cerebral edema •125 mEq/L – nausea and malaise •120 mEq/L – headache, lethargy, obtundation •115 mEq/L – seizure and coma
  • 23. Characterised by : • CNS signs of increased intracranial pressure and tissue signs of excessive intracellular water • Hypertension induced by the rise in ICP • BP usually returns to normal after correction of Na+ level • With severe hyponatraemia – rapid development of oliguric renal failure – irreversible with delayed therapy.
  • 24. Classifications, aetiology and treatment of Hyponatremia Hyper-osmotic, Iso-smotic, Hypo-osmotic Hyperosmotic and Isosmotic Hyponatremia are due to excessive solutes in plasma. Hyperosmotic –Hyperglycemia • Each 100 mg/dl of glucose reduces [Na+] by 1.6 mEq/l –Hypertonic Infusions • Glycerol • Mannitol • Glycine – Treat underlying cause
  • 25.  Hypo-osmotic Hyponatremia Hypovolemic, Euvolemic and Hypervolemic – Hypovolemic – most common cause • Excessive renal (diuretic) or GI (emesis, diarrhea) losses • Asymptomatic – fluid resuscitate with isotonic saline • Symptomatic or plasma [Na+] less than 110 mEq/L – Calculate Na+ deficit = 0.6 x wt(kg) x (desired [Na] – actual [Na] – Correct at a rate no greater than 0.5 mEq/L/hour or 12 mEq/L/day
  • 26. Hypernatremia • Defined as serum [Na+] greater than 145 mEq/L Clinical features: • Lethargy, weakness, and irritability that progress to seizure, coma, and death
  • 27. Classifications, aetiology and treatment of Hypernatremia • Hypovolemic – loss of hypotonic fluids – Diuresis, vomiting, diarrhea – Replace the free water deficit – 0.6 x weight (kg) x ([Na+]/140 -1) • Hypervolemic – gain of hypertonic fluids – Hypertonic saline administration – Diuretics (lasix) to excrete sodium in urine combined with hypotonic saline for partial volume replacement
  • 28. 3. Composition changes • Abnormalities of composition of major importance are changes of – potassium – calcium – magnesium – changes in Acid-base balance.
  • 29. Potassium • Major cation of intracellular water – 98% at concentration of 150mEq/L • Normal dietary intake – 50-100mEq/day • Severe injury, surgical stress, acidosis and catabolic state can result in the release of significant amount from the intracellular space into the extracellular space
  • 30. Hyperkalaemia (>5.5mmol/l) • Signs limited to the CVS and GIT • GIT symptoms – nausea, vomiting, intermittent intestinal colic and diarrhoea • CVS signs apparent on ECG – – Tall peaked T waves – Widened QRS complex – Depressed ST segments
  • 33. Hypokalaemia (<3.5mmol/l) • Due to excessive renal excretion of K+ • Prolonged administration of K+ free parenteral fluids with continued obligatory renal loss of K+ (>20mEq/day) • Parenteral nutrition with inadequate K+ replacement • Loss of GIT secretions • Hyperthroidism, B-adrenergics, insulin,alkalosis
  • 34. Hypokalaemia Signs • Failure of normal contractility of skeletal, smooth and cardiac muscles i.e. weakness leading to flaccid paralysis, diminished/absent tendon reflexes and paralytic ileus • ECG signs – arrhythmias, low voltage ECG, flat T waves and depressed ST segments
  • 35. Treatment • Prevention i.e. replace GIT fluid loss volume for volume • K deficit(mmol) = (desired – actual)x 0.6 x wt(kg) • Give K+ not more than 40mEq/L of fluid • Rate not exceeding 20mEq/hour • Don’t give oliguric patients and post op patient within 24hrs post surgery
  • 36. Calcium • Majority of Calcium in the body is in the form of PO4 3- and CO3 2- • Normal daily intake : 1 – 3g/day • ≥ 200mg excreted in the urine daily, the rest is lost in the GIT • Half of the serum calcium exists in unionised form bound to plasma proteins • 45% exists in ionised form and is responsible for neuromuscular stability
  • 37. • Acidosis increases the ionised fraction while alkalosis decreases it • Disturbances of calcium metabolism are generally not problematic in the postoperative patient • Therefore, routine administration of Ca2+ to the surgical patient is not needed in the absence of specific indications
  • 38. Hypocalcaemia • Serum levels < 8mg/100ml • Features – – Circumoral numbness – Numbness of fingers and toes – Hyperactive tendon reflexes – +ve Chvostek’s sign – Tetany, carpopedal spasms – Convulsions (with severe deficits) – Prolonged Q-T interval on the ECG
  • 39. Hypocalcaemia Causes • Acute pancreatitis • Massive soft tissue infections – necrotising fascitis • ARF and CRF • Pancreatic and small bowel fistulas • Hypoparathyroidism • Severe depletion of magnesium Give Calcium salts – gluconate and chloride – IV , - lactate – orally Correct underlying cause and the deficit
  • 40. Hypercalcaemia • Symptoms – Easy fatigability – Lassitude – Weakness – Anorexia, nausea and vomiting – Weight loss In severe cases - lassitude, somnambulism, stupor, coma - Headaches, skeletal pains, thirst, polydipsia, polyuria
  • 41. Hypercalcaemia Causes • Hyperparathyroidism • Cancer with bony metastasis e.g. Breast Ca Treatment • Inorganic PO4 3- given IV/orally lowers Ca2+ levels • Large doses of furosemide • Prevention is the main treatment of hypercalcaemia due to metastatic cancer – Low calcium diet, adequate hydration to promote urinary excretion of Ca2+
  • 42. Magnesium • Total body content – 2000mEq • Half of this is in bone • Distribution similar to potassium – mostly intracellular • Serum concentration between 1.5 –2.5mEq/L • Normal dietary intake – 20mEq/day • Largely excreted in the faeces
  • 43. Magnesium Deficiency • Seen in starvation, malabsorption syndromes, GIT losses, parenteral nutrition, acute pancreatitis, DKA during treatment , primary aldosteronism and chronic alcoholism Symptoms and signs similar to hypocalcaemia
  • 44. Treatment • Parenteral MgSO4 or MgCl2 solution • Monitor HR, BP, respiratory rate and ECG with large doses • Never to be given in the phase of oliguria or severe volume deficit to avoid toxicity Excess – rare but seen in renal insufficiency - Correct acidosis - Correct pre existing ECF volume deficit -Withhold exogenous Mg2+
  • 45. Fluid and Electrolyte Therapy Parenteral solutions – • Vary in composition to satisfy various fluid requirements in the surgical patient. • Given a situation, a typical fluid will correct the abnormalities with minimal demands on the kidneys. • The choice of a particular fluid depends on the volume status of the patient and the type of concentration or compositional abnormality present.
  • 46. Maintenance of balance by 1.Normal daily requirement 2.Replacement of loss (due to disease or surgery or both) •Normal fluid requirement: In the tropics: 3 litres/24 hrs: (1 L N/S + 2 L of 5% D/w) In temperate regions: 2.5 L/24 hrs (0.5 L N/S + 2 L 5% D/w
  • 47. • Electrolytes: daily requirements • 1.5 – 2.3 grams of sodium/day/adult (2.3 grams equivalent to one teaspoonful of salt • This is equiv to 1.5 mmol–2.3 mmol • N/saline = 154 mmol/litre !
  • 48. • Using body weight - 100ml/kg for 1st 10 kg. + 50ml/kg for 2nd 10 kg. + 25ml/kg for each subsequent kg. > 20 •Determinations using body wt over-estimate needs in obese pts and under-estimate in thin pts •Also by fluid shifts that accompany onset of anabolism –For adults [rough estimate] •30-35ml/kg/day
  • 49. For maintenance, give: 4.3% dex-in-0.18 saline Osmolality = 300 For both children and adults
  • 50. Fluid & electrolyte therapy for different surgical conditions: 1.Dehydration (vomiting, diarrhoea, faecal fistula): • N/s only only until urine output normal • Then, Then, maintenance fluid 2.Shock: same as above 3. Gastric outlet obstruction: • Fluid of choice in goo is N/saline, not ringer’s lactate (b/cos in goo, there is alkalosis. Ringer’s lactate will worsen it)
  • 51. • In resuscitation • Use ringer’s lactate or N/s • Ringer’s lactate is better than N/s • NORMAL URINE OUTPUT = 30-50ml/hr (0.5 ml–1 ml/kg/hr) = NORMAL TISSUE PERFUSION=ADEQUATE RESUSCITATION
  • 52. • 5%, 10%, 50% dextrose; darrows: • 5% dex post-op = protein-sparing • 10% dex = augment liver storage • 50% dextrose = hypoglycamia • Darrows = augment potassium
  • 53. Composition of Parenteral Fluids (mEq/L) Fluid Na+ K+ Ca2+ Cl- HCO3- CHO pH ECF 142 4 5 103 27 7.4 LR 130 4 2.7 109 28 6.5 0.9%(0.45) NaCl 154(77) 154(77) 4.5 4.3% D/S .2% NaCl 30 30 4.5 3%(5) NaCl 513(855) 513(855) 4.5 5% Albumin 145 7.4 Badoe’s 43.3 16 1.3 51.7 9
  • 54. Errors in fluid therapy  5% Dex in N/s is hypertonic. It has a diuretic effect  5% Dex in water is hypotonic. In large volumes, will cause cerebral oedema and hyponatraemia. Treatment: diuretics, then N/saline  Darrow's before adequate urine output – very serious error!  Ringer’s lactate in alkalosis  Starting fluid before blood is taken for blood chemistry
  • 55. Complications of intravenous fluid therapy • Thrombophlebitis • Local sepsis • Septicaemia • Overloading • Air embolism
  • 56. Current trend • ERAS protocol on fluid management • PlasmaLyte • Normosol
  • 57. Conclusion • Versatility in fluid management is a prerequisite for successful management of patients
  • 58. References • Baja’s principles and practice of surgery E. A.Badoe .Et al 5th edition. • Fluids and electrolyte metabolism Dr.O. A. Atoyebi, (FMCS) Professor of surgery College registrar 2009 • Principles of fluid and electrolyte management in surgery Prof G. U. Chianakwana FWACS, FRCS (IRELAND) WASC update course 2019 • Bailey & love's short practice of surgery, 27th edition edited by norman S. Williams, P. Ronan o'connell, andrew mccaskie

Editor's Notes

  • #5: Transcellular fluid – bone, GIT secretions, CSF, synovial fluid, etc.
  • #9: Hence a daily Na need of 130 and K need of 50
  • #11: Concentration of blood cells and plasma proteins increases with ECF deficit and decreases with ECF excess Concentration of Na+ is not related to the volume status of the ECF
  • #19: Concentration difference exists only transiently because they create an extremely strong force for water movement across cell membranes Na is thus primarily responsible for the osmolarity  Osmolarity refers to the number of solute particles per 1 L of solvent, whereas osmolality is the number of solute particles in 1 kg of solvent
  • #21: The concentration of osmotically active particles will change, If water alone is added to or lost from ECF. There is a large storehouse of sodium ready to compensate abnormal losses from the body. Total body Na+ amounts to 5000mmol of which 44% in ECF, 9% in ICF & 47% in the bone (more osmotically inactive). Excretion protected by reabsorption by renal tubules Aldosterone - most powerful conservator of sodium. Following trauma, for at least 48 hours - almost non-excretion of sodium due to increased adrenocortical activity. Hypernatraemia is likely to arise if excessive amount of 0.9% saline solution is given.
  • #30: Hyperkalemia is defined as a serum potassium concentration greater than approximately 5.0-5.5 mEq/L in adults; the range in infants and children is age-dependent. Levels higher than 7 mEq/L can lead to significant hemodynamic and neurologic consequences, whereas levels exceeding 8.5 mEq/L can cause respiratory paralysis or cardiac arrest and can quickly be fatal. See the image below. Early ECG changes of hyperkalemia, typically seen at a serum potassium level of 5.5-6.5 mEq/L, include the following: Tall, peaked T waves with a narrow base, best seen in precordial leads [3] Shortened QT interval ST-segment depression At a serum potassium level of 6.5-8.0 mEq/L, the ECG typically shows the following: Peaked T waves Prolonged PR interval Decreased or disappearing P wave Widening of the QRS Amplified R wave At a serum potassium level higher than 8.0 mEq/L, the ECG shows the following: Absence of P waves Progressive QRS widening Intraventricular/fascicular/bundle branch blocks The progressively widened QRS eventually merges with the T wave, forming a sine wave pattern. Ventricular fibrillation or asystole follows.
  • #32: Treatment - Recheck +Withhold exogenous K+ - Ion exchange resins (1gm/kg @ 0.5gm/ml of NS enema X 30min - Give HCO3- , glucose and insulin (45:1000:20) -Give 1g of 10% calcium gluconate under ECG monitoring to suppress the myocardial effects of K+ temporarily Peritoneal Dialysis when indicated . EBT
  • #49: OSMOLALITY OF 5% DEX-IN- NORMAL SALINE IS: 586 mOsmol OSMOLALITY OF BLOOD IS: 300 mOsmol/kg (290-310) OSMOLALITY OF N/S IS: = 300 OSMOLALITY OF 5% D/W IS: = 286