Intravenous 0.9% sodium chloride therapy does not reduce length of stay of alcohol-intoxicated patients in the emergency department: A randomised controlled trial
Journal article
Perez, Siegfried R.S., Keijzers, Gerben B., Steele, Michael Craig, Byrnes, Joshua and Scuffham, Paul A.. (2013). Intravenous 0.9% sodium chloride therapy does not reduce length of stay of alcohol-intoxicated patients in the emergency department: A randomised controlled trial. EMA - Emergency Medicine Australasia. 25(6), pp. 527 - 534. https://doi.org/10.1111/1742-6723.12151
Authors | Perez, Siegfried R.S., Keijzers, Gerben B., Steele, Michael Craig, Byrnes, Joshua and Scuffham, Paul A. |
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Abstract | Background: I.v. 0.9% sodium chloride (normal saline) is frequently used to treat ED patients with acute alcohol intoxication despite the lack of evidence for its efficacy. Objective: The study aims to compare treatment with i.v. normal saline and observation with observation alone in ED patients with acute alcohol intoxication. Methods: A single-blind, randomised, controlled trial was conducted to compare a single bolus of 20 mL/kg i.v. normal saline plus observation with observation alone. One hundred and forty-four ED patients with uncomplicated acute alcohol intoxication were included. The study was conducted in one tertiary and one urban ED in Queensland, Australia. Primary outcome was ED length of stay (EDLOS). Secondary outcomes were treatment time, breath alcohol levels, intoxication symptom score, level of intoxication and associated healthcare costs. Results: Both groups were comparable at baseline: blood alcohol content (BAC) was similar between treatment and control groups (0.20 % BAC vs 0.19 % BAC, P = 0.44) as were initial intoxication symptom scores (22.0 vs 22.3, P = 0.90). Both groups had a similar EDLOS (287 min vs 274 min, P = 0.89; difference 13 min [95% CI −37–63]) and treatment time (244 min vs 232 min, P = 0.94; difference 12 min [95% CI −31–55]). Change of breath alcohol levels, intoxication score and level of intoxication were not significantly different between the two groups. Patients in the treatment group had an additional healthcare cost of A$31.92 compared with control. Conclusions: I.v. normal saline therapy added to observation alone does not decrease ED length of stay compared with observation alone. Intoxication symptom scores and general state of intoxication were similar in both groups. The present study suggests that either approach is reasonable, but observation alone might be preferred as it is less resource intensive. |
Keywords | alcohol intoxication; intravenous administration; length of stay |
Year | 2013 |
Journal | EMA - Emergency Medicine Australasia |
Journal citation | 25 (6), pp. 527 - 534 |
Publisher | Blackwell Publishing Inc. |
ISSN | 1742-6731 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1111/1742-6723.12151 |
Open access | Open access |
Page range | 527 - 534 |
Research Group | School of Allied Health |
Publisher's version | |
Place of publication | Australia |
https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/870zz/intravenous-0-9-sodium-chloride-therapy-does-not-reduce-length-of-stay-of-alcohol-intoxicated-patients-in-the-emergency-department-a-randomised-controlled-trial
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