Dehydration, Children: Dilute Apple Juice
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Dilution
Dilute apple juice with water to achieve 50:50 mix. Other preferred fluids can be used at the same dilution.
Dosing
During the consultation, give the child 5 mL aliquots to drink every 2–5 minutes from a spoon or a 5-mL syringe. Continue this at home while symptoms persist and/or until urine output is restored.
As a guide, the child should be given 10 mL/kg for each episode of diarrhoea or 2 mL/kg for each episode of vomiting.
If vomiting and diarrhoea have stopped before rehydration treatment is started, continue rehydration until restoration of normal urine production. (Restoration of hydrated body weight can also be used, but this is rarely known with enough accuracy.)
Tips and challenges
Many guidelines discourage the use of fluids other than ORS due to the potential for osmotic diarrhoea or hyponatraemia. In the Canadian trial one out of 323 in each arm developed hyponatremia. There was no statistically significant difference in episodes of diarrhoea.
Children older than 2 years of age tend to experience the greatest benefit from the dilute apple juice or preferred fluid. Compared with younger children, those older than 2 years are more accustomed to drinking apple juice, more taste discriminating and less likely to become moderately or severely dehydrated.
There is considerable variation in sugar content between different store-bought apple juice products. A product that the child already likes may be a useful first choice. Diluting the apple juice reduces the theoretical risk of osmotic diarrhoea. The sugar provides useful calories while they are not absorbing other nutrients.
Concurrent administration of ondansetron may be beneficial for children older than 6 months of age and greater than 8 kg who are vomiting.