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Dilutional hyponatraemia: a cause of massive fatal intraoperative cerebral oedema in a child undergoing renal transplantation.
  1. A Armour
  1. State Pathologists Department, Institute of Forensic Medicine, Belfast, United Kingdom.

    Abstract

    A four year old boy with polyuric renal failure resulting from recurrent urinary tract infections and vesicoureteric reflux from birth underwent renal transplantation. In the past he had had five ureteric reimplant operations and a gastrostomy, as he ate nothing by mouth. He required peritoneal dialysis 13 hours a night, six nights a week. His fluid requirements were 2100 ml per day. This included a night feed of 1.5 litres Nutrizon. Before operation he received 900 ml of Dioralyte instead of the Nutrizon feed, and peritoneal dialysis was performed as usual. The operation itself was technically difficult and there was more blood loss than anticipated, requiring intravenous fluids and blood. The operation ended about four hours later but he did not wake up. Urgent computed tomography revealed gross cerebral oedema. He died the next day. At necropsy the brain was massively oedematous and weighed 1680 g.

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