Abstract

Bronchiolitis is the most common reason for hospitalization in infants in the first year of life.1 There are no proven therapies to treat this common condition, with the mainstay of therapy being supportive care with intravenous fluid (IVF) and supplemental oxygen when needed. Hyponatremia is often encountered in children with bronchiolitis and has been associated with more severe disease and worse outcomes, and neurologic complications have been reported.2–6 Explicit recommendations for IVF therapy in children with bronchiolitis are lacking in both consensus guidelines and authoritative reviews.7–9 The historical approach to providing maintenance fluids in children has been to administer hypotonic IVF with a sodium concentration similar to that found in breast and cow milk (30 mEq/L).10 In 2003, we began recommending 0.9% saline in 5% dextrose for the prevention of hospital-acquired hyponatremia, based on numerous reports of iatrogenic deaths related to hypotonic fluids and the incidence of syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH)-like states in acutely ill children.11 A 0.9% saline solution has a sodium concentration (154 mEq/L), which is isotonic to the aqueous phase of plasma water.12 Since our initial recommendation, there have been >15 randomized, prospective trials involving >2000 children confirming that hypotonic maintenance fluids result in hospital-acquired hyponatremia and that isotonic fluids decrease the incidence of hyponatremia without associated complications.13 …

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