FLUID AND ELECTROLYTE REQUIREMENTS
Complex fluid or electrolyte replacement or abnormal distribution issues
Electrolyte and glucose abnormalities
- If Na+ <135 mmol/L, follow Hyponatremia guideline
- If Na+ >150 mmol/L, follow Hypernatremia guideline
- If K+ >6.0 mmol/L, follow Hyperkalaemia guideline
- If plasma K+ <2.5 mmol/L with persistent losses/poor absorption or plasma K+ either persistently <3.0 mmol/L or <3.0 mmol/L and combined with new tachyarrhythmia or muscle weakness follow Hypokalaemia guideline
- If hyperglycaemic, use diabetic regimes where applicable
- see Triage of patients with hyperglycaemia guideline
- Seek senior help
Continuing Excess losses
Does the patient continue to have excess fluid loss?
- Vomiting
- Nasogastric tube losses,
- Diarrhoea,
- Fistulae
- Stoma
- Drains
- Continuing blood loss,
- Polyuria
- Sweating
- Lactation
Action if excess fluid loss
- Seek senior help
- Measure volume of losses and type of fluid lost
- consider biochemical analysis of fluid e.g. haematocrit, biochemistry and serum protein
- Replace volume using an appropriate fluid in addition to maintenance regimen
- if GI losses >1500 mL, check chloride level. If patient hypochloraemic, use sodium chloride 0.9% +/- potassium chloride
- replace diarrhoea/small bowel/bowel preparation losses with compound sodium lactate (Hartmann's) solution
Co-morbidities
Does the patient have co-morbidities?
- Frail elderly/malnourished
- Severe sepsis
- Chronic cardiac failure
- Chronic renal failure
- Chronic liver failure - seek advice of liver specialist
- Neurosurgical/neurological pathology
- Obese with BMI > 40
Action if co-morbidities
- Seek senior help
CHOICE OF MAINTENANCE FLUID FOR 'NORMAL' ADULT
'Normal' adult fluid, electrolyte and glucose maintenance requirements
- Use ideal body weight or actual body weight, whichever is lower, in estimations below
Water
- 25-30 mL/kg/day
- if no fever present, estimate is 25ml/kg/24hr
- if fever present, estimate is 30ml/kg/24hr
Sodium
- 50-170 mmol/day (1-2 mmol/kg/day)
Potassium
- 25-85 mmol/day (1 mmol/kg/day)
Chloride
- 80-120 mmol/day (1-1.5 mmol/kg/day)
Glucose
- 50-100 g/day to limit starvation ketosis
- but this does not address nutritional needs
- see Practice and ethics of nutritional support in medical patients
Amount of fluid and electrolyte
- Estimate maintenance volume and electrolyte required for a 'normal' patient
- If patient has other sources of maintenance fluid and electrolyte intake from drugs e.g. IV nutrition, blood and blood products reduce the maintenance prescription accordingly
- excluding resuscitation/replacement of excess losses
Choice of fluid
- Within fluid, give glucose 50-100g/day
- e.g. Glucose 5% contains 5g/100ml
- Round weight-based potassium prescriptions to the nearest common fluids available
- e.g. a 67 kg person could have fluids containing 20 mmol and 40 mmol of potassium in a 24-hour period
- Always use commercially produced pre-mixed bags of any fluid with potassium chloride
NEVER add potassium chloride to infusion bags
- For the 'general' patient, prescribe Maintelyte (1L contains: Na+ 40mmol, K+ 20mmol, Mg2+ 1.5mmol, Cl- 40mmol and glucose 50g) at 1ml/kg/hr
- if unavailable, prescribe sodium chloride 0.18% with glucose 4% with potassium chloride 20 mmol/L; but remember prescribing > 2.5 litre increases risk of hyponatraemia
- Adjust quantity and content of maintenance fluid used as indicated by most recent biochemical results
How to deliver
- Beneficial to deliver daily maintenance requirement over daytime hours
- more physiological and will promote sleep and wellbeing
- increase rate and limit time that infusion should run accordingly
- Give as much fluid volume as possible orally or enterally
- give remainder IV or, in selected medical patients, SC
- Suggestion - place a handwritten label on any bag containing potassium warning staff not to increase infusion rate
Cautions
- Stressed patients (e.g. post-operative, septic) are at risk of complication from excess of:
- chloride (hyperchloraemic acidosis caused by sodium chloride 0.9%)
- free water (e.g. acute hyponatraemia, seizures, brain damage and death if glucose solutions with inadequate sodium content are used)
- 1000 mL over 8 hr is not indicated for maintenance alone
- even for the largest pyrexial patients
Administer resuscitation fluid separately
- Many unstable patients need maintenance fluids with repeated fluid boluses for resuscitation
- Do not increase rate of maintenance fluids to resuscitate
- content of maintenance fluid (especially hypotonic or high potassium-content) is inappropriate/dangerous when given in large volumes required for resuscitation
- see Fluid resuscitation guideline
MONITORING
Chart
Hourly
- If continuing excess losses or patient haemodynamically unstable, urine output
6-hrly
- BP
- if patient haemodynamically unstable, increase frequency
Daily
- Fluid balance chart
- Serum U&E
- Body weight
Examine daily
- Check for peripheral oedema
- Auscultate lung fields
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
- Senior review daily
- Adjust quantity and content of maintenance fluid as indicated by most recent biochemical results
- As soon as possible, re-establish oral fluids and remove indwelling intravenous lines
Administer resuscitation fluid separately
- If deficit occurs despite maintenance fluid, administer adequate maintenance fluid concurrently with appropriate resuscitation fluid
- see Fluid resuscitation guideline
Fluid overload
- If signs of fluid overload appear and parenteral fluid remains necessary, restrict fluid input to maximum 1 L/24 hr or reduce input by 50%
Date updated: 2024-03-04