• Medicine · Jul 2023

    The practices of intravenous sodium bicarbonate therapy in neonatal intensive care units: A multi-country survey.

    • Hassan Al-Shehri, Renad Alqahtani, Aroob M Alromih, Amal Altamimi, Khloud Alshehri, Latifah Almehaideb, Mosleh Jabari, and Abdullah Alzayed.
    • Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2023 Jul 21; 102 (29): e34337e34337.

    AbstractA common occurrence in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is metabolic acidosis. Sodium bicarbonate (SB) has been widely used, but there is insufficient evidence on how SB affects neonates in NICUs with metabolic acidosis. The worsening of intracellular acidosis, the impairment of myocardial function, fluctuations in cerebral blood flow, and intracranial hemorrhage are some of the unfavorable effects of SB treatment in neonates that have been documented in the literature. This study aimed to explore neonatologists' practices for using intravenous SB (ISB) in NICUs. A multi-country survey was carried out in 2022 using an online questionnaire sent to neonatologists in various countries in order to gather information about the use of ISB in NICUs. A previously validated questionnaire was adapted and used in this study. The response rate was 67%. The findings show that 91.2% of neonatologists were using SB to correct metabolic acidosis in the NICU; 71.4% did not have written guidelines for using sodium bicarbonate. The majority of them (78.9%) reported that dosage is included in their guidelines for the use of ISB. The findings of this study emphasize the critical importance of providing guidelines in using ISB for managing metabolic acidosis in NICU to standardize procedures and reduce the use of potentially unsuitable and unsafe treatments, as it has been shown that 71.4% of neonatologists worldwide use sodium bicarbonate without guidelines.Copyright © 2023 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

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