Association Between a Chloride-Liberal vs Chloride-Restrictive Intravenous Fluid Administration Strategy and Kidney Injury in Critically Ill Adults
TL;DR: The implementation of a chloride-restrictive strategy in a tertiary ICU was associated with a significant decrease in the incidence of AKI and use of RRT and there were no differences in hospital mortality, hospital or ICU length of stay, or need for RRT after hospital discharge.
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Abstract: Context Administration of traditional chloride-liberal intravenous fluids may precipitate acute kidney injury (AKI). Objective To assess the association of a chloride-restrictive (vs chloride-liberal) intravenous fluid strategy with AKI in critically ill patients. Design, Setting, and Patients Prospective, open-label, sequential period pilot study of 760 patients admitted consecutively to the intensive care unit (ICU) during the control period (February 18 to August 17, 2008) compared with 773 patients admitted consecutively during the intervention period (February 18 to August 17, 2009) at a university-affiliated hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Interventions During the control period, patients received standard intravenous fluids. After a 6-month phase-out period (August 18, 2008, to February 17, 2009), any use of chloride-rich intravenous fluids (0.9% saline, 4% succinylated gelatin solution, or 4% albumin solution) was restricted to attending specialist approval only during the intervention period; patients instead received a lactated solution (Hartmann solution), a balanced solution (Plasma-Lyte 148), and chloride-poor 20% albumin. Main Outcome Measures The primary outcomes included increase from baseline to peak creatinine level in the ICU and incidence of AKI according to the risk, injury, failure, loss, end-stage (RIFLE) classification. Secondary post hoc analysis outcomes included the need for renal replacement therapy (RRT), length of stay in ICU and hospital, and survival. Results Chloride administration decreased by 144 504 mmol (from 694 to 496 mmol/patient) from the control period to the intervention period. Comparing the control period with the intervention period, the mean serum creatinine level increase while in the ICU was 22.6 μmol/L (95% CI, 17.5-27.7 μmol/L) vs 14.8 μmol/L (95% CI, 9.8-19.9 μmol/L) (P = .03), the incidence of injury and failure class of RIFLE-defined AKI was 14% (95% CI, 11%-16%; n = 105) vs 8.4% (95% CI, 6.4%-10%; n = 65) (P Conclusion The implementation of a chloride-restrictive strategy in a tertiary ICU was associated with a significant decrease in the incidence of AKI and use of RRT. Trial Registration clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00885404
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Citations
Should chloride-rich crystalloids remain the mainstay of fluid resuscitation to prevent ‘pre-renal’ acute kidney injury?: con
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TL;DR: It is argued that chloride-rich crystalloids such as 0.9% saline should be replaced with balanced crystalloids as the mainstay of fluid resuscitation to prevent ‘pre-renal' acute kidney injury.
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TL;DR: The addition of an organic anion in balanced solutions allows a reduced chloride concentration which, according to Stewart theory, limits the occurrence of hyperchloremic acidosis.
Reply: Assessment of Acute Kidney Injury in Neurologically Injured Patients Receiving Hypertonic Sodium Chloride: Does Chloride Load Matter?
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TL;DR: This single-center, retrospective study found that neurologically injured patients receiving hypertonic sodium chloride with high chloride loads are at risk of developing hyperchloremia and acute kidney injury, with a threshold of 2055 mEq of chloride over 7 days predicting AKI risk.
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Anders Perner,Nicolai Haase,Anne Berit Guttormsen,Anne Berit Guttormsen,Jyrki Tenhunen,Gudmundur Klemenzson,Anders Aneman,Kristian Rørbæk Madsen,Morten Hylander Møller,Jeanie M. Elkjær,Lone Musaeus Poulsen,Asger Bendtsen,Robert Winding,Morten Steensen,Pawel Berezowicz,Peter Søe-Jensen,Morten H. Bestle,Kristian Strand,Jørgen Wiis,Jonathan White,Klaus J. Thornberg,Lars Quist,Jonas B. Nielsen,Lasse H. Andersen,Lars Broksø Holst,Katrin Thormar,Anne Lene Kjældgaard,Maria Louise Fabritius,Frederik Mondrup,Frank Christian Pott,Thea Palsgaard Møller,Per Winkel,Jørn Wetterslev +32 more
TL;DR: Patients with severe sepsis assigned to fluid resuscitation with HES 130/0.42 had an increased risk of death at day 90 and were more likely to require renal-replacement therapy, as compared with those receiving Ringer's acetate.
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Frédérique Schortgen,Jean-Claude Lacherade,F. Bruneel,Isabelle Cattaneo,François Hemery,François Lemaire,Laurent Brochard +6 more
TL;DR: The use of this preparation of hydroxyethylstarch as a plasma-volume expander is an independent risk factor for ARF in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock.
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