Safety and efficacy of oral rehydration therapy until 2
β Scribed by Kenji Itou; Tatsuya Fukuyama; Yusuke Sasabuchi; Hiroyuki Yasuda; Norihito Suzuki; Hajime Hinenoya; Chol Kim; Masamitsu Sanui; Hideki Taniguchi; Hideki Miyao; Norimasa Seo; Mamoru Takeuchi; Yasuhide Iwao; Atsuhiro Sakamoto; Yoshihisa Fujita; Toshiyasu Suzuki
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 290 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0913-8668
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β¦ Synopsis
Purpose
In many countries, patients are generally allowed to have clear fluids until 2β3Β h before surgery. In Japan, long preoperative fasting is still common practice. To shorten the preoperative fasting period in Japan, we tested the safety and efficacy of oral rehydration therapy until 2Β h before surgery.
Methods
Three hundred low-risk patients scheduled for morning surgery in six university-affiliated hospitals were randomly assigned to an oral rehydration solution (ORS) group or to a fasting group. Patients in the ORS group consumed up to 1,000Β ml of ORS containing balanced glucose and electrolytes: 500Β ml between 2100 the night before surgery and the time they woke up the next morning and 500Β ml during the morning of surgery until 2Β h before surgery. Patients in the fasting group started fasting at 2100 the night before surgery. Primary endpoints were gastric fluid volume and pH immediately after anesthesia induction. Several physiological measures of hydration and electrolytes including the fractional excretion of sodium (FENa) and the fractional excretion of urea nitrogen (FEUN) were also evaluated.
Results
Mean (SD) gastric fluid volume immediately after anesthesia induction was 15.1 (14.0) ml in the ORS group and 17.5 (23.2) ml in the fasting group (PΒ =Β 0.30). The mean difference between the ORS group and fasting group was β2.5Β ml. The 95% confidence interval ranged from β7.1 to +2.2Β ml and did not include the noninferior limit of +8Β ml. Mean (SD) gastric fluid pH was 2.1 (1.9) in the ORS group and 2.2 (2.0) in the fasting group (PΒ =Β 0.59). In the ORS group, mean FENa and FEUN immediately after anesthesia induction were both significantly greater than those in the fasting group (PΒ <Β 0.001 for both variables). The ORS group reported they had been less thirsty and hungry before surgery (PΒ <Β 0.001, 0.01).
Conclusions
Oral rehydration therapy until 2Β h before surgery is safe and feasible in the low-risk Japanese surgical population. Physicians are encouraged to use this practice to maintain the amount of water in the body and electrolytes and to improve the patientβs comfort.
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