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Critical care medicine · Apr 2004
Osmole gap in neurologic-neurosurgical intensive care unit: Its normal value, calculation, and relationship with mannitol serum concentrations.
- Edgar J García-Morales, Rohit Cariappa, Curtis A Parvin, Mitchell G Scott, and Michael N Diringer.
- Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
- Crit. Care Med. 2004 Apr 1; 32 (4): 986-91.
ObjectiveTo determine a) if the admission osmole gap, the difference between osmolality and osmolarity, is the same in the neurologic-neurosurgical intensive care unit (NNICU) population as in healthy controls; b) which of 11 osmole gap formulas, or osmolality, correlates best with mannitol serum concentrations; c) whether osmole gap correction for plasma water content improves this correlation; and d) whether the osmole gap can predict mannitol serum concentrations.DesignProspectively collected data.SettingsNNICU of a tertiary teaching hospital.SubjectsTen NNICU patients on mannitol and eight not on mannitol, and 95 healthy controls.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsWe compared the admission osmole gap between all 18 NNICU patients and healthy controls and the correlation between osmole gap or osmolality and mannitol serum concentrations in ten NNICU patients while receiving mannitol. The osmole gap was calculated using 11 osmolarity formulas (six corrected for plasma water content). Student's t-test was used to compare the mean osmole gap between control and patient groups.We found that the mean osmole gap in healthy subjects and NNICU patients was not different. There were no statistically significant differences between any of the 11 osmole gap formulas and the correlation of osmole gap with serum mannitol concentrations; the highest R =.80, with formula 4, 1.86 (sodium + potassium) + (blood urea nitrogen/2.8) + (glucose/18) + 10, requires the least laboratory measurements. Osmolality had the lowest correlation with mannitol concentration (R =.60), significantly lower than any of the osmole gap calculations. Plasma water content correction did not improve this correlation. The osmole gap-mannitol serum concentrations relationship is 1 to 0.81, not accurate enough to predict specific mannitol serum concentrations.ConclusionsThe osmole gap correlates better with mannitol serum concentrations than osmolality, and although it cannot predict a specific mannitol serum concentration, a normal osmole gap concentration, as we find at trough times, indicates sufficient clearance for a new mannitol dose.
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