The Association Between Preoperative Fasting Time, Blood Glucose Concentration and Blood Ketone Levels in Pediatric Patients Undergoing Surgical Procedures at the Kenyatta National Hospital
Abstract
Background/Introduction: Preoperative fasting guidelines have been updated to ensure the
risk of paediatric patients developing hypoglycaemia, ketoacidosis, and derangement in acidbase
balance during the preoperative fasting period is reduced since they are unable to
properly regulate glucose metabolism due to their anatomical and physiologic differences
when compared to adults. However, challenges at resource limited, high-volume centers such
as the Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH), have led to inefficient implementation of the
preoperative fasting recommendations.
Objective: to determine the association between preoperative fasting time, blood glucose
concentration and blood ketone levels in pediatric patients undergoing surgical procedures at
the National Hospital.
Methods: an analytical cross-sectional study conducted at the Kenyatta National Hospital
main theatres, the ophthalmology and ENT satellite theatres involving two hundred and
twenty-two (222) paediatric patients aged 0-13 years who met the inclusion criteria.
Consenting paediatric patients were recruited on the eve and day of surgery and blood
samples of 0.5 microlitre collected from the fingertip or heel at induction of anaesthesia.
Blood glucose and ketone levels were measured using POC handheld Abbott Freestyle
Optimum Neo combined glucose and ketone meter. Statistical analyses were performed using
SPSS version 26 and Pearson’s correlation was used to determine the strength and direction
of the associations with statistical significance tested at 5% (p-value ≤ 0.05).
Results: The overall median fasting time was 11.0 (IQR 7-14) hours with 218 (98.2%)
deviating from the preoperative fasting guidelines. There was hypoglycaemia in 65 (29.3%)
patients and high ketone levels in 92 (41.4%) of the patients. The study found poor
correlation between preoperative fasting time and blood glucose level which was statistically
significant (r = -0.190, p =0.04) and a poor correlation between preoperative fasting time and
blood ketone levels which was not statistically significant (r= -0.086, p= 0.202). There was
also poor association between age, weight gender and types of last meal and the glucose level
at induction of anaesthesia.
Conclusion: there was prolonged preoperative fasting time and marked deviation from
current documented preoperative fasting guidelines among paediatric patients at the Kenyatta
National Hospital. The correlation between preoperative fasting time and blood glucose
concentration and blood ketone levels was not strong however it is clinically significant as it
impacts perioperative outcomes
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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