A
small amount of water (Early oral hydration (EOH)) given to children following the recovery from
general anesthesia does not increase the occurrence of nausea or vomiting and
improves comfort.
Early oral hydration
(EOH) has been found to be safe and lessens the occurrence of nausea, hypoxemia
and vomiting in children undergoing general anesthesia. It has be helpful in
significantly decreasing thirst and improving satisfaction, as concluded from a
prospective randomized study in BMC anesthesiology.
This study compared the
early and late oral hydration i.e. EOH and DOH in children after general
anesthesia in terms of safety and tolerability and hence, improving comfort in
these children.
Out of 2000 children
relating to American Society of Anesthesiology I-III; 1000 were randomized to
EOH group and 1000 to DOH group. The children ingested a small quantity of
drinking water (as suggested) following the recovery of swallowing reflex in
EOH group. The vital signs of children were checked for 20 minutes in a post-anesthesia
care unit. In the DOH group, water was given at 4 hours after use of general anesthesia.
Their parameters like satisfaction, thirst, oropharyngeal discomfort, nausea,
and vomiting were all examined.
On the whole, the data were assembled from 1770 patients i.e. EOH = 832 and DOH = 938. No hypoxemia was observed in any of the groups, nor did the occurrence of nausea and vomiting vary between these groups (P > 0.05) as observed in the following table 1:
Table 1: Occurrence of post-operative nausea and vomiting in PACU and ward
The thirst score of the EOH group considerably
reduced relative to the DOH group in the children >5 years old following
drinking for 10 to 20 minutes (P < 0.05).
BMC anesthesiology
Early versus delayed postoperative oral hydration in children following general anesthesia: a prospective randomized trial
Xiaorong Yin et al.
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