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Published in: European Journal of Medical Research 1/2012

Open Access 01-12-2012 | Research

Influence of an acetate- and a lactate-based balanced infusion solution on acid base physiology and hemodynamics: an observational pilot study

Authors: Klaus F Hofmann-Kiefer, Daniel Chappell, Tobias Kammerer, Matthias Jacob, Michaela Paptistella, Peter Conzen, Markus Rehm

Published in: European Journal of Medical Research | Issue 1/2012

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Abstract

Background

The current pilot study compares the impact of an intravenous infusion of Ringer’s lactate to an acetate-based solution with regard to acid–base balance. The study design included the variables of the Stewart approach and focused on the effective strong ion difference. Because adverse hemodynamic effects have been reported when using acetate buffered solutions in hemodialysis, hemodynamics were also evaluated.

Methods

Twenty-four women who had undergone abdominal gynecologic surgery and who had received either Ringer’s lactate (Strong Ion Difference 28 mmol/L; n = 12) or an acetate-based solution (Strong Ion Difference 36.8 mmol/L; n = 12) according to an established clinical protocol and its precursor were included in the investigation. After induction of general anesthesia, a set of acid–base variables, hemodynamic values and serum electrolytes was measured three times during the next 120 minutes.

Results

Patients received a mean dose of 4,054 ± 450 ml of either one or the other of the solutions. In terms of mean arterial blood pressure and norepinephrine requirements there were no differences to observe between the study groups. pH and serum HCO3- concentration decreased slightly but significantly only with Ringer’s lactate. In addition, the acetate-based solution kept the plasma effective strong ion difference more stable than Ringer’s lactate.

Conclusions

Both of the solutions provided hemodynamic stability. Concerning consistency of acid base parameters none of the solutions seemed to be inferior, either. Whether the slight advantages observed for the acetate-buffered solution in terms of stability of pH and plasma HCO3- are clinically relevant, needs to be investigated in a larger randomized controlled trial.
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Metadata
Title
Influence of an acetate- and a lactate-based balanced infusion solution on acid base physiology and hemodynamics: an observational pilot study
Authors
Klaus F Hofmann-Kiefer
Daniel Chappell
Tobias Kammerer
Matthias Jacob
Michaela Paptistella
Peter Conzen
Markus Rehm
Publication date
01-12-2012
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
European Journal of Medical Research / Issue 1/2012
Electronic ISSN: 2047-783X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-17-21

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