• Prehosp Disaster Med · Jan 2001

    Volume kinetics of intravenous fluid therapy in the prehospital setting.

    • C Svensén, F Sjöstrand, and R G Hahn.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Söder Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Prehosp Disaster Med. 2001 Jan 1;16(1):9-13.

    IntroductionTo study the volume effect of isotonic and hypertonic crystalloid fluid during ambulance transports after mild trauma, a prospective case-control study was initiated, using the ambulance and helicopter transport system in Stockholm.MethodsThe hemodilution resulting from intravenous infusion of 1.0 L of Ringer's acetate solution (n = 7) or 250 ml of 7.5% sodium chloride (n = 3) over 30 minutes (min) was measured every 10 min during 1 hour when fluid therapy was instituted at the scene of an accident, or on arrival at the hospital. The dilution was studied by volume kinetic analysis and compared to that of matched, healthy controls who received the same fluid in hospital.ResultThe hemodilution at the end of the infusions averaged 7.7% in the trauma patients and 9.1% in the controls, but the dilution was better maintained after trauma. The kinetic analysis showed that the size of the body fluid space expanded by Ringer's solution was 4.6 L and 3.8 L for the trauma and the control patients, respectively, while hypertonic saline expanded a slightly larger space. For both fluids, trauma reduced the elimination rate constant by approximately 30%.ConclusionMild trauma prolonged the intravascular persistence of isotonic and hypertonic crystalloid fluid as compared to a control group.

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