Abstract

BackgroundTrauma is the leading cause of death among children. Studies have found that insufficient intravenous (IV) fluid resuscitation contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality in pediatric trauma. While large-volume resuscitation represents a potential solution, overly aggressive fluid management may complicate hospitalizations and recovery. Through this study, we aim to evaluate the impact of aggressive fluid resuscitation on outcomes in pediatric trauma. Materials and methodsThis is a retrospective review utilizing our level I trauma center registry for pediatric patients aged <16 y admitted from 2014 to 2017. Patients transferred from our center within 24 h and those who arrived from outside hospitals were excluded. Patients who received blood product transfusions were excluded. Included patients were divided into two crystalloid groups: <60 mL/kg/24 h and ≥60 mL/kg/24 h. Outcome measures included ICU length-of-stay, length-of-hospitalization, complications, and mortality rate. ResultsStudy sample included 320 patients (<60 mL/kg/24 h = 219; ≥60 mL/kg/24 h = 101). The ≥60 mL/kg/24 h group was younger (9.95 versus 5.27, P = 0.0001). There were no significant differences in GCS on arrival, injury severity score, Abbreviated Injury Scale, Revised Trauma Scores, traumatic brain injury, and operative intervention between groups. Outcome measures showed there was no significant difference in 30-day readmission rate, complications, or mortality. Large-volume crystalloid resuscitation was associated with longer mean ICU length-of-stay (1.5 d versus 0.8 d, P = 0.004). ConclusionsIn this single-institution retrospective database analysis, large-volume crystalloid resuscitation (≥60 mL/kg) was associated with a significant increase in ICU length-of-stay without survival benefit. More research in the form of randomized trials will help determine the optimal rate for fluid resuscitation in pediatric trauma patients while weighing potential critical care complications.

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