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Centre for Anaesthesia, Royal Free and University College Medical School, London, United Kingdom
Address correspondence to Nicholas J. Wilkes, Department of Anaesthesia, Royal Free Hospital, Pond Street, London NW3 2QG, United Kingdom. Address e-mail to Nicholas.Wilkes{at}rfh.nthames.nhs.uk
| Abstract |
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IMPLICATIONS: This prospective, randomized, blinded trial showed that, in elderly surgical patients, the use of balanced IV solutions can prevent the development of hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis and provide better gastric mucosal perfusion compared with saline-based fluids.
| Introduction |
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| Methods |
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After recruitment, patients were randomly allocated to the Balanced Fluid group or the Saline group. Randomization and stratification were instituted by using permuted blocks with a size of 4. All clinicians involved in the care of the patients were blinded to patients group allocation. Patients in the Balanced Fluid group received Hartmanns solution and 6% hetastarch in balanced electrolyte and glucose injection (Hextend®; BioTime, Berkeley, CA), and patients in the Saline group were given 0.9% sodium chloride solution and 6% hetastarch in 0.9% sodium chloride solution (Hespan®; Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, IL). Table 1 illustrates the composition of these fluids. Both study groups received a 500-mL bolus of colloid at the induction of general anesthesia. Initial fluid loading was followed by a crystalloid infusion of 7 mL · kg-1 · h-1 during surgery. Further IV fluids were given according to a clinical algorithm (Fig. 1).
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Sedative premedication was administered as required. General anesthesia was induced with an IV anesthetic and maintained with inhaled anesthetics. Intraoperative monitoring included electrocardiography, pulse oximetry, invasive blood pressure measurement, and central venous pressure measurement, which constituted part of the clinical algorithm for study drug infusion (Fig. 1).
The objective of this trial was to investigate whether the composition of intraoperatively administered fluids had an effect on postoperative chloride levels and other plasma electrolytes, glucose, acid-base balance, and measures of organ perfusion. A chloride level >110 mmol/L plus a base deficit of <-2.0 mmol/L was defined a priori as hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis on the basis of the reference ranges of the respective analyses.
Adverse events (AEs) and clinical interventions were recorded for 5 days after the operation by applying a standard AE reporting system often used in drug evaluation studies. After 28 days, patients were contacted by telephone to identify any further AEs. All observers and clinicians were blinded to the patients group allocation for the duration of the study period until after all case report forms were closed. The AE reporting was rigorous and externally audited, but it was primarily intended for safety screening purposes rather than outcome analysis, because Hextend is a new colloid solution not yet approved for clinical use in the United Kingdom. Special emphasis was placed on postoperative nausea and vomiting as a clinical manifestation of poor gastric perfusion, but it was anticipated that the power of our study would not permit the meaningful statistical evaluation of such events.
Clinical data management was performed independently by Clinical Data Care in Lund, AB, Sweden. The data management plan and all outcome variables were agreed with the statistical team a priori. No post hoc analyses are reported here. All data were entered twice (double-data entry) by using Microsoft Access 97 (Microsoft, Redmond, WA). Data were then transferred to SAS® version 6.12 by using SAS® ODBC (SAS, Cary, NC) under Windows 95.
Descriptive statistics, such as the number of observations, mean, SD, and 95% confidence intervals, were calculated for quantitative variables, whereas qualitative variables were described with frequency tables. All statistical tests were two-sided and performed at the 5% significance level. Postoperative chloride levels were analyzed with an analysis of covariance technique. For comparison of means or means of differences of secondary variables, Students t-test was applied. For secondary variables showing numbers of patients, Fishers exact test was used. It was calculated that 62 patients were needed to detect a 5% difference in the primary outcome variable (postoperative chloride levels) with a level of significance of 5% and a power of at least 99%.
| Results |
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Twenty-three patients had been randomly allocated to the Balanced Fluid group and 24 to the Saline group. The groups were similar with regard to demographic patient characteristics and type and duration of surgical procedures. There were no significant differences in volumes of study fluids administered and postoperative hemodynamic indices (Table 2).
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The mean increase in chloride levels from baseline to the postoperative sample was significantly larger in the Saline group than the Balanced Fluid group (Table 3). The ranges for postoperative chloride levels were 106 to 125 mmol/L in the Saline group and 99 to 114 mmol/L in the Balanced Fluid group. Acid-base analysis demonstrated a significantly larger decline in all indices, i.e., standard base excess, plasma bicarbonate, and plasma pH, in the Saline group compared with the Balanced Fluid group (Table 4). In the Saline group, six patients developed marked acidosis with a standard base excess of <-4.0 mmol/L (range, -9.7 to 1.3 mmol/L) at the end of surgery, compared with none in the Balanced Fluid group (range, -3.5 to 3.1 mmol/L). In the Saline group, eight patients had a pH <7.32 at the end of surgery (range, 7.24 to 7.48), compared with none in the Balanced Fluid group (range, 7.34 to 7.49).
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Gastric tonometry demonstrated a significantly larger increase in Pg-aCO2 from start to end of surgery in the Saline group (1.7 ± 0.5 kPa, end of surgery; range, 0 to 6.3 kPa) compared with the Balanced Fluid group (0.9 ± 1.1 kPa, end of surgery; range, -0.6 to 2.2 kPa; P = 0.0394), suggesting better gastric perfusion in the Balanced Fluid group. Differences in mean intraoperative urine output between the Balanced Fluid group (1.68 ± 1.3 mL · kg-1 · h-1) and the Saline group (0.96 ± 0.7 mL · kg-1 · h-1) did not reach statistical significance (P = 0.0787). Similarly, the perioperative change of core to peripheral temperature gradient at the end of surgery, although smaller in the Balanced Fluid group (-0.3°C ± 1.8°C) than the Saline group (-1.2°C ± 1.5°C), was not statistically different (P = 0.0859).
Descriptive analysis of the AEs, and in particular AEs related to the study drug, revealed a frequent incidence in patients in the Saline group (overall, 379 AEs in the Saline group versus 272 in the Balanced Fluid group; possibly or probably related AEs, 198 in the Saline group versus 116 in the Balanced Fluid group). The combination of nausea and vomiting was recorded 23 times in the Saline group compared with 12 times in the Balanced Fluid group. Eight patients (38%) in the Saline group experienced postoperative vomiting compared with three patients (14%) in the Balanced Fluid group. Seven patients (33%) in the Saline group were given rescue antiemetics compared with four patients (19%) in the Balanced Fluid group.
| Discussion |
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Although the acidifying potential of large volumes of sodium chloride solutions on plasma has been recognized in two randomized controlled trials (6,7) and a series of case reports and letters (1218), controversy has surrounded both the etiology and the clinical relevance of this phenomenon. The term "dilutional acidosis" implied that plasma expansion and consecutive dilutional reduction of plasma bicarbonate were the underlying mechanisms (1318). In contrast, the Stewart model emphasizes the importance of hyperchloremia resulting in a reduction of the strong ion difference (SID) (19). The SID is calculated as [Na+] + [K+] - [Cl-] - [lactate-]. This approach considers PaCO2 and SID as independent variables regulating acid-base balance, whereas hydrogen ion and bicarbonate concentrations are dependent variables.
In our study, two-thirds of patients that were given Hespan and sodium chloride 0.9% developed a hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis at the end of surgery. This phenomenon was absent in patients who were given Hextend and Hartmanns solution. When McFarlane and Lee (6) administered sodium chloride 0.9% or Plasmalyte 148 (Baxter Healthcare, Deerfield, IL), 15 mL · kg-1 · h-1, to 30 patients undergoing major hepatobiliary or pancreatic surgery, they demonstrated a tendency to metabolic acidosis in their Saline group. Scheingraber et al. (7) gave 24 patients undergoing gynecologic surgery either sodium chloride 0.9% or lactated Ringers solution, 30 mL · kg-1 · h-1. Their results confirmed that large volumes of sodium chloride solutions led to a metabolic acidosis that was associated with a decrease in the SID. Consistent with previous studies of lactated IV solutions, the increase in serum lactate seen in our study in the Balanced Fluid group reflected the lactate content of Hextend and Hartmanns solution (6). The increase in glucose, although statistically significant, was thought not to be clinically relevant in this group of patients.
One of the risks of hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis may lie in its inappropriate clinical management. An intraoperative metabolic acidosis that persists despite repeated fluid challenges can be misinterpreted as undertreated hypovolemia and can lead to further IV infusions. It is not always recognized that hyperchloremia is the cause of the metabolic acidosis and that the administration of sodium chloride infusion may indeed exacerbate rather than ameliorate the abnormality. In an editorial, Prough and Bidani (20) emphasized the need to differentiate hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis from lactic acidosis and a primary lactatemia.
Hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis has often been considered to be benign and self-limiting (6,7,13). The evidence is now increasing that it may impair end organ perfusion and interfere with cellular exchange mechanisms: Williams et al. (5) found a significantly increased time to first urination and a greater frequency of abdominal discomfort in 18 healthy volunteers who developed metabolic acidosis after the administration of 50 mL/kg sodium chloride 0.9%, compared with lactated Ringers solution. Hyperchloremia alone has a negative effect on renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate (21). Acidosis in anesthetized pigs has been associated with impaired gastropyloric motility (22). The authors speculated that this mechanism may be implicated in perioperative complications such as gastroparesis and vomiting. Another animal model demonstrated better survival after massive hemorrhage when lactated Ringers solution instead of sodium chloride solution was used for resuscitation (23).
We found better indices of gastric mucosal perfusion in the Balanced Fluid group than the Saline group. Gastric tonometry is an important predictor of outcome after major surgery (3). Poor gastric perfusion may also be a risk factor for postoperative nausea and vomiting (24). Fewer events of postoperative nausea and vomiting and a less frequent use of rescue antiemetics were reported in patients in the Balanced Fluid group in our study. The results for urine output and core peripheral temperature difference showed trends in favor of the Balanced Fluid group, but the findings were not statistically significant.
In conclusion, our study has shown that, in elderly surgical patients, the use of balanced IV infusions can avoid the development of hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis and is associated with better indices of gastric mucosal perfusion than saline-based fluids. There is increasing evidence, both in human and animal experiments, to suggest that the use of saline-based fluids may be associated with clinically relevant sequelae. These findings warrant further investigation in appropriately designed prospective, randomized, controlled trials.
| Acknowledgments |
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The authors thank the manufacturing pharmacies at University College London Hospitals and the Royal Free Hospital for the provision of study fluids and the randomization of patients. The authors gratefully acknowledge the help with planning and statistical analysis provided by Clinical Data Care in Lund, AB, Sweden.
| Footnotes |
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| References |
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