Objectives: We conducted a retrospective evaluation of enteral infusion with a marketed hypoosmolar oral rehydration solution (HORS), as an alternative to intravenous infusion.
Population and methods: Premature infants, with difficult venous condition, 30 weeks or more during HORS infusion. Enteral ORS started after well-tolerated milk gastric gavage. Gradual increase of enteral feeding.
Results: January 1999 to April 2001, 105 neonates 28 weeks to 36 weeks, birth weight 1050 to 2700g, including 71.5% eutrophic newborns 30 to 34 weeks; 13.3% hypotrophic<10th P. More than 90% had a physiological weight curve: weight loss vs birth<15%, back to birth weight at day 15. No significant pathology during ORS. Failure of ORS for 7/105 children. Relative risk increased 8 fold if term was less than 30 weeks, 7 folds in the event of enteropathy before ORS. In 26.7% of the infants, gastric enteral residuals exceeded 1/3 of intake, vomiting and/or abdominal ballooning lasted less than 48 hours. There were 4 deaths during follow-up (periventricular leucomalacia, myocardial infarctus) and 1 necrotizing enterocolitis. At theoretical birth date, 25% of the neonates were hypotrophic<10th P. At one and 2 years of age, less than 5% were still hypotrophic: relative risk increased 18 fold when birth weight was<5th P.
Conclusion: HORS is an efficient, well-tolerated, low-cost and less invasive alternative to intravenous infusion. It must be reserved for eutrophic neonates born>30 weeks gestation due to risk of failure and insufficient growth. Validation with a multicentric clinical trial is in progress.