Saline versus Ringer’s Solution. Fight!

Internists use normal saline.
Surgeons use lactated ringers.

Its a cultural difference, perpetuated by dogma.

Here’s how Burton Rose characterized Ringer’s solution in his classic Clinical Physiology of Acid-Base and Electrolyte disorders:

This what I was taught. That is what I teach and this is what I believed, but I’m turning.
METHODS
The Study was a bundle-of-care study, in which a number of practices were changed all at once. The study was conducted in a single ICU at the University of Melbourne. For six months outcomes were tracked with usual care to act as the control group, then the bundle was phased-in and after 6 months, they tracked a second 6 month block to represent the experimental group. By spacing the control experimental groups as they did, they eliminated seasonal variation in illnesses. 

During the control phase, physicians were able to prescribe IV fluids per personal preference. During the experimental period, chloride rich solutions were restricted to specific clinical conditions: hyponatremia, traumatic brain injury and cerebral edema. Otherwise patients were given low chloride solutions: Hartman’s solution, plasma-Lye 148 and 4% albumin.

The primary outcome was the change in creatinine and incidence of AKI, using RIFLE criteria. Secondary outcomes included need for acute dialysis, length of of ICU and hospital stay and survival.

RESULTS

The study consisted of 1644 admissions to the ICU, 760 in the control period and 773 in the experimental period. The two cohorts were well matched with significant differences only with metabolic diagnosis being more common in the control period (7 vs 4.4%) and neurologic disorders being more common in the experimental period (6.2 vs 8.8%).

The difference in the fluids being used was dramatic and this resulted in significant differences in electrolyte exposure:

The authors demonstrated a statistically significant difference in the change in serum creatinine,(increase of 0.25 in the control group vs 0.16 experimental group) which is of questionable clinical significance. More impressive was the decrease in AKI by RIFLE criteria.
With Cox proportional hazards model adjustment they found a hazard ratio of 0.52 (P=0.01) for AKI.
The authors actually use a modified RIFLE criteria as they only used changes in serum creatinine and ignore changes in urine output. This is convenient as most of the studies that have validated the RIFLE criteria have likewise used creatinine limited criteria. As a refresher for those of you sleeping in AKI class here is how the RIFLE criteria grades AKI: 
The most important finding was a decreased need for acute dialysis: 78 patients during control versus 49 with the low chloride bundle (P=0.005).
There was no difference in length of ICU or hospital stay, and no change in survival.
In the discussion the authors acknowledge that their study design precludes a deep analysis of what was responsible for the reduction in AKI. By changing nearly all of the fluids at the same time it is difficult to assign blame to any one change. Was it the decrease in chloride? Or the increase in alkali? Increased potassium? Despite this limitation the authors provide the rational for blaming chloride for AKI.
They point out that chloride in normal saline is no where near physiologic at 154 mEq/L. They point to observational study data showing decreased dialysis with Plasmalyte compared to saline.  Animal studies showing better cortical perfusion with decreased chloride exposure. They suggest that Tubulo-glomerular feedback maybe responsible for this. 
Tubulo-glomerular Feedback is the driving principle behind the theory of Acute Renal Success. Acute renal success is a theory which attempts to explain the conundrum of oliguria in ATN. Patients with ATN have intact glomeruli, yet in some cases they have a GFR of zero. Why do normal appearing glomeruli cease to filter? They cease to filter because if the they did, the damaged tubules would not be able to reabsorb the filtrate and the kidney would excrete all of the body’s plasma in about half an hour.
The glomeruli can only safely filter 100 ml per minutes if the tubules reabsorb 99+% of that fluid. In ATN that reassurance is lost and the intact glomeruli need a way to detect the failure of reabsorption. Chloride sensors in the thick ascending loop of Henle signal the glomeruli to decrease filtration when activated. So in cases of ATN, the glomeruli initially filter normally but when the proximal tubule and Loop of Henle fail to reabsorb the chloride, chloride floods these receptors triggering a feedback mechanism to shutdown the glomeruli associated with that tubule.
In this article the authors suggest the non-physiologic, high chloride solutions we use in patients may result in excess chloride delivery to the thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle triggering tubulo-glomerular feedback decreasing GFR. 
This is an intriguing paper and I look forward to more data, even if it means the surgeons were right.
Update: Jim Smith and I had a great back-and-forth on this. Open this link to follow all of the fireworks.

Thoughts on QR codes at Medical Conferences

I am just back from Med 2.0. It was a great conference that did so many things right. One of the things that was right, was that every talk, every poster, every rapid fire session has its own web page. Here is what the top of those pages look like:

The square in the upper right, if you’r are not familiar, is a QR-code. All posters are supposed to use this label and all presentations are supposed to display this graphic on the title slide. When you scan the code with a smart phone (you can find an excellent free, QR-scanner for the iPhone here, life hacker endorsement of said scanner here), the smart phone will open up the web page for the talk or poster. Cool idea. Unfortunately, it was poorly executed by most presenters. Here is a typical title slide:

Using my iPhone from my seat in the middle of the auditorium, I had no chance of getting an accurate scan. Since I am one of those annoying conference participants who photographs every slide, I have found myself scanning my MacBook screen to get the links. Absurd, and really no easier than using the conference website to search for the presentation page. The right way to do it is the way John Ainsworth did it in his presentation on using Drupal to create a low tech, no software, SMS-notification system across 11 countries, 6 languages and 3 time zones:

Chicken Noodle Soup versus Normal Saline. Fight!

More than a few times this week, I have found myself prescribing Jewish Penicillin, chicken noodle soup. CNS is rich in sodium so it is just about the best way to prescribe volume repletion in the out-patent arena. So i was delighted to see one of the dietician students projects on display in the hospital:

1720 mg of sodium per can of Swanson 100% Natural Chicken Broth (two 240 mL servings per can). So how does that stack up against old faithful, normal saline?

Normal saline has 154 mmol of sodium per liter or 3,542 mg of sodium per liter (154 mEq x 23 mg per mmol, the molecular weight of sodium), so a can of chicken soup is equivalent to about half a bag of normal saline.

Update: I don’t get many good comments on Blogger but I got this pitch perfect comment on Twitter:

@kidney_boy Nice. Didn’t fully appreciate that a bag of saline was 3.5gm Na! Makes me laugh thinking of the 2gm Na diet pts getting IVF!
— Aaron Logan (@pyknosis) September 15, 2012

Kidometer is out!

For the last few months my partner and I have been working on an application for the iPhone. We finished it last week and now its available in the App Store!

The application is for pediatricians or any health professional who works with kids. Its called the Kidometer and it is a database of age-based normals. In pediatrics everything changes with age, from the normal range for alkaline phosphatase to the proper size of a laryngoscope blade to the appropriate advice to a parent to keep the tot safe. All of that information is available to the user of Kidometer instantly.

Chek out Kidometer.com for further details or better yet shoot us a few bucks by trying it out.

Custom dialysate solutions

I get nervous when I need to dialyze someone who is severely hyponatremic. Dialysis has the power to change the sodium concentration very fast. Patients with chronic, compensated hyponatremia need their sodium corrected slowly. Experts recommend increasing the sodium by less than 12 mEq/L/day and to actually undertarget only 6 mEq/L/day to give you some margin for error.

Over the week-end we were consulted on a patient with a sodium of 106 and acute renal failure. By the time we were forced to dialyze the patient the sodium was up to 112. To do this safely we selected CVVHD and then diluted our dialysate down to 120 mEq/L.

Here is a Keynote (100 mb), PDF (155 kb) and a narrated version of that presentation (118 mb) where I walk through the algebra on how to mix a dialysate of any final sodium concentration.

The movie available for download is very high quality. Below is a YouTube conversion of that video to save you the 118 mb download.

This is some serious Sodium Jujitsu and I awarded my team the first Nephrology Merit Badge: Sodium Ninja (pages | pdf). Designed for Avery 5163 2×4 labels.

Nephrology Merit Badge, updated for the 21st century as a sticker for your iPad

PBFluids breaks into the medical literature.

The first time PBFluids was referenced in the medical literature was in Matt Sparks’ article on nephrology internet resources.

Today I received an e-mail from Tom Oates. Apparently, when he is not researching the unique genetic predisposition of the WKY rat to crescentic glomerulonephritis he is an avid reader of both Hemodialysis International and PBFluids. He sent me this article in Hemodialysis International regarding the highest creatinine ever. The key sentence in the article:

Extremely high levels of serum creatinine have been reported in the literature.3 The highest level of serum creatinine reported was 37 mg/dL.3

So what is the highest previous creatinine reported in the literature? Well according to the author, Said Abuhasna, it’s 37 from this post at PBFluids. Nice to see blogs being included in the canon of medical literature. Though it would be even nicer if they spelled my name right.

The death of MobileMe and a whole mess of broken links at PBFluids–Updated

One of the best stories about Steve Jobs was his tirade is response to the MobileMe disaster.

He gathered the MobileMe team together and asked,

“Can anyone tell me what MobileMe is supposed to do?”
Having received a satisfactory answer, he continues,
“So why the f*** doesn’t it do that?”

He then picked another executive to run the project on-the-spot. Ultimately, this resulted in the service being shuttered and replaced with iCloud.

I never had any problems with MobileMe; it always worked fine for me. However, I foolishly relied on it to host files for PBFluids. This includes all of the presentations and handouts that are the highest trafficked pages of the site. Well, MobileMe stopped accepting new subscriptions a year ago and as of June 30th the hosted files are no longer accessible. I have downloaded all of the material and will start re-uploading the files to DropBox.  The problem is rewiring all of the past links to the new file locations. This will take some time.

As I looked through the collection of files that used to be hosted at MobileMe I found a lot of journal articles and other copyrighted works. I have no idea how popular these links were but I remember when I uploaded them, PBFluids was a lonely backwater, where I was the sole source of traffic. I put the files the files online for my own use in teaching and on rounds. I don’t plan on replacing these files.

Update: 
7/3/12 Lecture tab is ported to DropBox
7/3/12 Handout tab is ported to DropBox through Adventures in Renal Imaging
7/5/12 Handout and Book tabs ported to DropBox