Abstract

Hyperosmolar therapy is the cornerstone of medical management of sustained elevated intracranial pressure from cerebral edema. Acute intracranial hypertension and herniation is a medical emergency that requires rapid treatment and stabilization to prevent secondary brain injury or death. Intravenous hypertonic sodium chloride (NaCl) 23.4% is an effective treatment modality commonly used in this setting. Because of its high osmolarity, use has historically been limited primarily to central venous line administration as an intermittent infusion due to concerns about thrombophlebitis, injection site pain, and tissue necrosis or injury with extravasation. The objective of this analysis was to prospectively evaluate the safety of administration of 23.4% NaCl as a rapid intravenous push over 2-5min. A prospective analysis of patients admitted between April 2021 and December 2021 who received 23.4% NaCl intravenous push over 2-5min in a central or peripheral line was performed. Safety end points included incidence of new onset hypotension [defined as systolic blood pressure (SBP) < 90mm Hg or SBP decrease of at least 20mm Hg], bradycardia (defined as heart rate < 50 beats per minute), and infusion site reactions documented within 1h of administration. For secondary safety outcomes, highest and lowest SBP and lowest heart rates documented within 1h before 23.4% NaCl administration were compared with values collected within 1h post administration and evaluated by mixed-design analysis of variance test with adjustment for peripheral versus central line administration. We identified 32 patients who received 79 administrations of 23.4% NaCl through a central line or peripheral line during the study period. An SBP decrease of at least 20mm Hg was observed in 13% of patients, an SBP < 90mm Hg occurred in 16% of patients, and bradycardia occurred in 3% of patients who received 23.4% NaCl. Injection site pain was reported by one patient without documented thrombophlebitis, cellulitis, or tissue damage. Pain was not reported during two subsequent administrations in the same patient. There was no documented occurrence of soft tissue injury or necrosis in any patient. Compared with baseline vital signs before 23.4% NaCl administration, no difference in vital signs post administration was observed. Central and peripheral administration of 23.4% NaCl over 2-5min was well tolerated, and incidence of hypotension, bradycardia, or infusion site-related adverse events was rare.

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