Saline versus Lactated Ringer’s Solution

Author:

Maheshwari Kamal1,Turan Alparslan1,Makarova Natalya1,Ma Chao1,Esa Wael Ali Sakr1,Ruetzler Kurt1,Barsoum Sabri1,Kuhel Alan G.1,Ritchey Michael R.1,Higuera-Rueda Carlos1,Kopyeva Tatyana1,Stocchi Luca1,Essber Hani1,Cohen Barak1,Suleiman Iman1,Bajracharya Gausan R.1,Chelnick David1,Mascha Edward J.1,Kurz Andrea1,Sessler Daniel I.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of General Anesthesiology (K.M., A.T., W.A.S.E., K.R., S.B., A.G.K., M.R.R., T.K., G.R.B., A.K.), Department of Outcomes Research (K.M., A.T., N.M., C.M., K.R., H.E., B.C., I.S., G.R.B., D.C., E.J.M., A.K., D.I.S.), Department of Quantitative Health Sciences (N.M., C.M., E.J.M.), and Department of Orthopedic Surgery (C.H.-R.), Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio; the Division of

Abstract

Abstract Background Both saline and lactated Ringer’s solutions are commonly given to surgical patients. However, hyperchloremic acidosis consequent to saline administration may provoke complications. The authors therefore tested the primary hypothesis that a composite of in-hospital mortality and major postoperative complications is less common in patients given lactated Ringer’s solution than normal saline. Methods The authors conducted an alternating cohort controlled trial in which adults having colorectal and orthopedic surgery were given either lactated Ringer’s solution or normal saline in 2-week blocks between September 2015 and August 2018. The primary outcome was a composite of in-hospital mortality and major postoperative renal, respiratory, infectious, and hemorrhagic complications. The secondary outcome was postoperative acute kidney injury. Results Among 8,616 qualifying patients, 4,187 (49%) were assigned to lactated Ringer’s solution, and 4,429 (51%) were assigned to saline. Each group received a median 1.9 l of fluid. The primary composite of major complications was observed in 5.8% of lactated Ringer’s versus 6.1% of normal saline patients, with estimated average relative risk across the components of the composite of 1.16 (95% CI, 0.89 to 1.52; P = 0.261). The secondary outcome, postoperative acute kidney injury, Acute Kidney Injury Network stage I–III versus 0, occurred in 6.6% of lactated Ringer’s patients versus 6.2% of normal saline patients, with an estimated relative risk of 1.18 (99.3% CI, 0.99 to 1.41; P = 0.009, significance criterion of 0.007). Absolute differences between the treatment groups for each outcome were less than 0.5%, an amount that is not clinically meaningful. Conclusions In elective orthopedic and colorectal surgery patients, there was no clinically meaningful difference in postoperative complications with lactated Ringer’s or saline volume replacement. Clinicians can reasonably use either solution intraoperatively. Editor’s Perspective What We Already Know about This Topic What This Article Tells Us That Is New

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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