Reliability of capillary blood potassium measurements in children with acute gastroenteritis
Health records (2006–2015) of patients discharged from Poznan University of Medical Sciences children’s hospital with the main diagnosis of acute gastroenteritis (AGE; n=1080; International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision: A09, A08.0, A08.2) were screened for the following inclusion criter...
Saved in:
Published in: | Archives of disease in childhood Vol. 103; no. 11; pp. 1091 - 1093 |
---|---|
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
England
BMJ Publishing Group LTD
01-11-2018
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Summary: | Health records (2006–2015) of patients discharged from Poznan University of Medical Sciences children’s hospital with the main diagnosis of acute gastroenteritis (AGE; n=1080; International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision: A09, A08.0, A08.2) were screened for the following inclusion criteria: potassium and sodium concentrations measured in the capillary blood before admission to the ward,1 in the serum on admission to the ward,2 and a difference in time of less than 4 hours between the results of capillary and venous blood analyses.3 Capillary blood potassium was assessed using Stat Profile (Nova Biomedical; until 2006), IL1304 (Instrumentation Laboratory; until 2009), AVL OMNI 3 (Roche Diagnostics; until May 2010), ABL835 Flex (Radiometer Medical; since January 2008) and RAPIDLab 1265 (Siemens Healthcare; since June 2010). Means±SD are presented Parameter All patients Subgroup Sample size 247 90 Age (years) 2.7±2.6 2.9±2.7 Body mass on admission (kg) 15±8 16±8 Sex 131 (53.0%) male 116 (47.0%) female 52 (57.8%) male 38 (42.2%) female Capillary sampling time, from admission (min) 6±44 13±37 Venous sampling time, from admission (min) 136±58 98±43 Time from capillary to venous results (min) 131±46 85±21 pH 7.38±0.05 7.38±0.04 Capillary K+ (mmol/L) 4.46±0.76 4.34±0.78 Venous K+ (mmol/L) 4.19±0.47 4.18±0.45 Hypokalaemia/hyperkalaemia (venous) 1.2%/2.4% 4.4%/1.1% Comorbidities 33.7% 31.1% Respiratory tract, % of cases with comorbidities 53 64 Symptom frequency (n=241) Vomiting 82% 90% Diarrhoea 68% 64% Fever 35% 31% Lethargy 26% 25% Symptom duration before admission, days (n=184/247) 2.0±1.3 1.9±1.5 Rotaviral infection (n=191 tested) 53.4% 53.3% Adenoviral infection (n=191 tested) 0.5% 0.1% This is the first study to document insufficient accuracy of potassium measurement in capillary blood in a large paediatric cohort. [...]measurements of potassium via capillary blood are unreliable in children with AGE. |
---|---|
Bibliography: | SourceType-Other Sources-1 ObjectType-Article-2 content type line 63 ObjectType-Correspondence-1 |
ISSN: | 0003-9888 1468-2044 |
DOI: | 10.1136/archdischild-2017-314561 |