4.6 Article

Preventing a drop in effective plasma osmolality to minimize the likelihood of cerebral edema during treatment of children with diabetic ketoacidosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 150, Issue 5, Pages 467-473

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2006.11.062

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Objectives To test whether a drop in effective plasma osmolality (P-Eff osm; 2 x plasma sodium [P-Na] + plasma glucose concentrations) during therapy for diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is, associated with an increased risk of cerebral edema (CE), and whether the development of hypernatremia to prevent a drop in the P-Eff osm is dangerous. Study design This study is a retrospective comparison of a CE group (n = 12) and non-CE groups with hypernatremia (n = 44) and without hypernatremia (n = 13). Results The development of CE (at 6.8 +/- 1.5 hours) was associated with a drop in P-Eff osm from 304 +/- 5 to 290 +/- 5 mOsm/kg (P < .001). Control patients did not show this drop in P-Eff osm at 4 hours (1 +/- 2 and 2 +/- 2 vs -9 +/- 2 mOsm/kg; P < .01), because of a larger rise in P-Na and/or a smaller drop in plasma glucose. During this period, the CE group received more near-isotonic fluids (69 +/- 9 vs 35 +/- 2 and 27 +/- 3 mL/kg; P < .001). The CE group had a higher mortality (3/12 vs 0/57; P = .003), and more neurologic sequelae (5/12 vs 1/57; P < .001). Conclusions CE during therapy for DICA was associated with a drop in P-Eff osm. An adequate rise in P-Na may be needed to prevent this drop in P-Eff osm.

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