Intravenous fluids administration is the usual practice in the postoperative period. Nonetheless, consensus about the more appropriate fluid reposition recipe is still insufficient.
Objective: To study the type of intravenous reposition used in Surgical Units and its impact on the internal milieu.
Design: prospective study of 112 patients with scheduled surgery, receiving only intravenous fluids.
Methods: biochemical study on postoperative fluids management in uncomplicated surgery. Principal variables: 1. Water and electrolytes administrated. 2. Differences in sodium/water balances before surgery vs first day after surgery. 3. Symptoms related to hyponatremia.
Results: Median P[Na] before and after surgery was 139.9+/-2.9 and 137.7+/-3.7, respectively (p<0.01). Fourteen patients (12.5%) had P[Na]<135, and 12 of them had a reduction of more than 6 mmol/L; accordingly, twenty-six patients (23.2%) had an increased free-water retention (p<0.05). Relevantly, they did not receive a higher amount of free-water and the proportion of isotonic saline/free water varied from <1 to >3. As possible mechanism of free-water accumulation: the postoperative P[Na] was lower in the patients who had a negative free-water clearance >or= -1 L (136.7+/-4.1 vs 138.5+/-3.2 mmol/L, p 0.015).
Conclusion: The present study provides new information about the intravenous fluids prescribed in postoperative patients, ie, different proportions saline/water are basically equivalent with respect to inducing symptomatic hyponatremia. The mean value of the relation saline/water is 2:1. Hypotonic fluids input is not clearly related to more intense hyponatremia; the latter appears to depend more on a reduced capacity of the kidney to generate sufficient free water output.