Myocardial and haemodynamic responses to two fluid regimens in African children with severe malnutrition and hypovolaemic shock (AFRIM study)

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dc.contributor.author Obonyo, Nchafatso
dc.contributor.author Brent, Bernadette
dc.contributor.author Olupot-Olupot, Peter
dc.contributor.author Kuipers, Irene
dc.contributor.author Wong, Sidney
dc.contributor.author Shiino, Kenji
dc.contributor.author Jonathan, Chan
dc.contributor.author Fraser, John
dc.contributor.author van Woense, Job B. M.
dc.contributor.author van Hensbroek, Michael Boele
dc.contributor.author Maitland, Kathryn
dc.date.accessioned 2018-12-18T10:58:11Z
dc.date.available 2018-12-18T10:58:11Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.issn 1466-609X
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12283/169
dc.description.abstract Background: Fluid therapy in severely malnourished children is hypothesized to be deleterious owing to compromised cardiac function. We evaluated World Health Organization (WHO) fluid resuscitation guidelines for hypovolaemic shock using myocardial and haemodynamic function and safety endpoints. Methods: A prospective observational study of two sequential fluid management strategies was conducted at two East African hospitals. Eligible participants were severely malnourished children, aged 6–60 months, with hypovolaemic shock secondary to gastroenteritis. Group 1 received up to two boluses of 15 ml/kg/h of Ringer’s lactate (RL) prior to rehydration as per WHO guidelines. Group 2 received rehydration only (10 ml/kg/h of RL) up to a maximum of 5 h. Comprehensive clinical, haemodynamic and echocardiographic data were collected from admission to day 28. Results: Twenty children were enrolled (11 in group 1 and 9 in group 2), including 15 children (75%) with kwashiorkor, 8 (40%) with elevated brain natriuretic peptide >300 pg/ml, and 9 (45%) with markedly elevated median systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) >1600 dscm-5/m2 indicative of severe hypovolaemia. Echocardiographic evidence of fluid-responsiveness (FR) was heterogeneous in group 1, with both increased and decreased stroke volume and myocardial fractional shortening. In group 2, these variables were more homogenous and typical of FR. Median SVRI marginally decreased post fluid administration (both groups) but remained high at 24 h. Mortality at 48 h and to day 28, respectively, was 36% (4 deaths) and 81.8% (9 deaths) in group 1 and 44% (4 deaths) and 55.6% (5 deaths) in group 2. We observed no pulmonary oedema or congestive cardiac failure on or during admission; most deaths were unrelated to fluid interventions or echocardiographic findings of response to fluids. Conclusion: Baseline and cardiac response to fluid resuscitation do not indicate an effect of compromised cardiac function on response to fluid loading or that fluid overload is common in severely malnourished children with hypovolaemic shock. Endocrine response to shock and persistently high SVRI post fluid-therapy resuscitation may indicate a need for further research investigating enhanced fluid volumes to adequately correct volume deficit. The adverse outcomes are concerning, but appear to be unrelated to immediate fluid management. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Médecins Sans Frontières en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher BMC en_US
dc.subject Severe Malnutrition en_US
dc.subject African Children en_US
dc.subject Hypovolaemic Shock en_US
dc.subject Gastroenteritis en_US
dc.subject Mortality en_US
dc.subject Myocardial Function en_US
dc.subject Echocardiography en_US
dc.subject Fluid Resuscitation en_US
dc.subject Ringers Lactate en_US
dc.title Myocardial and haemodynamic responses to two fluid regimens in African children with severe malnutrition and hypovolaemic shock (AFRIM study) en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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