Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

A multidisciplinary consensus on dehydration: definitions, diagnostic methods and clinical implications

Jonathan Lacey, Jo Corbett, Lui G. Forni, Lee Hooper, Fintan Hughes, Gary Minto, Charlotte Moss, Susanna Price, Greg Whyte, Tom Woodcock, Michael G. Mythen, Hugh Montgomery

Annals of Medicine · 2019

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Summary

Dehydration poses risk to public health. Dehydration is under-recognized and poorly managed in hospital and community-based care. Further research is required to improve assessment and management of dehydration and the authors have made recommendations to focus academic endeavours. Key messages Dehydration assessment is a major clinical challenge due to a complex, varying pathophysiology, non-specific clinical presentations and the lack of international consensus on definition and diagnosis. Plasma osmolality represents a valuable, objective surrogate marker of hypertonic dehydration which is underutilized in clinical practice. Dehydration is prevalent within the healthcare setting and in the community, and appears associated with increased morbidity and mortality.

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1080/07853890.2019.1628352
Catalogue ID
BFmokjo2bz-vz3tzf
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