Stress dose
Perioperative stress dose of steroids to mitigate this rare but potentially fatal complications of perioperative use of steroid such as full-blown adrenal crisis in the perioperative period due to the secondary adrenal insufficiency. Various exogenous steroid preparations are used for a wide range of indications.[1]
Stress doses
[edit]Emergency corticosteroid supplementation in patients taking exogenous corticosteroids:[2]
Category | Initial | Subsequent |
---|---|---|
Minor procedure or surgery under local anesthesia (e.g., inguinal hernia repair) | No extra supplementation is necessary | Continue normal dosing |
Moderate surgical stress (e.g., lower extremity revascularization, total joint replacement) | 50 mg hydrocortisone IV | 25 mg of hydrocortisone every eight hours for 24 hours. Resume usual dose thereafter. |
Major surgical stress (eg, esophagogastrectomy, total proctocolectomy, open heart surgery) | 100 mg hydrocortisone IV | 50 mg every eight hours for 24 hours. Taper dose by half per day to maintenance level. |
Pediatric doses
[edit]Emergent intramuscular dosing can be given if child is not tolerating oral medications or unable to get IV within 15 minutes. IM hydrocortisone sodium succinate doses are:[3]
- 25 mg for child 3 years and younger
- 50 mg for children >3 yrs – 12 years
- 100 mg for children 12 years and older.
References
[edit]- ^ Chilkoti, G. T.; Singh, A.; Mohta, M.; Saxena, A. K. (2019). "Perioperative "stress dose" of corticosteroid: Pharmacological and clinical perspective". Journal of Anaesthesiology Clinical Pharmacology. 35 (2): 147–152. doi:10.4103/joacp.JOACP_242_17. PMC 6598572. PMID 31303699.
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