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    Home  >  Oral Rehydration Salts  >  Oral Rehydration Therapy  >  How it Works

 
ORT: Celebration and Challenge
How Oral Rehydration Works
Management of Diarrhoea and use of ORT
Achievements and Challenges
25 Years of Saving Lives
Knowledge and Use of ORT
Communication and Social Mobilization
The Solution is in Your Hands
A Solution for Survival
Brochure: A Pocket Reference for Scouts
ORT: Elixir of life
ORT: Saved My Daughter's Life
ORT: Success Stories

Oral Rehydration Therapy: How it Works

Author: Roger M. Goodall

We are often asked to explain how ORT works - a question that can only be answered successfully by first considering some of the simple physiology of the normal intestine and then the changes that occur in a state of diarrhoeal disease.

This is a basic discussion of the question written in reasonable non-technical terms to provide some of this interesting background information.

GLOSSARY OF SOME OF THE TERMS USED

METABOLITE

Simple components into which food is broken down by digestion and which are subsequently built up into complex materials of body tissues e.g. proteins which are broken down into their component amino-acids by digestion and then me-tabolised back into further proteins in the body.

ION
A single electrically charged particle into which the atoms or molecules of some substances dissociate when in solution, e.g. sodium chloride in the solid state consists of molecules containing one atom of sodium Na and one atom of chlorine Cl bound together NaCl - in solution in water the molecule splits into two ions (Na+) and (Cl-) each of which tends to be loosely bound to three or four molecules of water
e.g.  (H8O4Na) + and (H6O3Cl)-
although for practical purposes they can be thought of as single ions Na+ and Cl-

Positively charged ions e.g. Na+ are called CATIONS and Negatively charged ions e.g. Cl- are called ANIONS.

The substances which show this dissociation into electrically charged ions are called ELECTROLYTE.

SOLUTE
A dissolved substance e.g. sodium chloride (the solute) dissolved in water (the solvent) to give a solution.

MOLARITY
If two different substances are in solution they are said to be equal in molarity (equimolar) if they have equal numbers of molecules per litre of solution. The mass or weight of each solute is then proportionate to their respective molecular weights.

HYPERNATRAEMIA
The presence of an excess amount of sodium Na+ in the blood plasma (i.e. over 140 mmol/l.) NORMONATRAEMIC - is the presence of a normal level of sodium and HYPONATRAEMIC - lower than normal sodium level in the plasma.

UNICEF/WHO O.R.S
  • Sodium Chloride 3.5 grams
  • Sodium Bicarbonate 2.5 grams
  • Potassium Chloride 1.5 grams
  • Glucose 20 grams

to be dissolved in one litre of clean drinking water

REFERENCE: The management of diarrhoea and use of oral rehydration therapy a Joint WHO/UNICEF statement.

THE PHYSIOLOGICAL PROCESS
In the normal healthy intestine, there is a continuous exchange of water through the intestinal wall - up to 20 litres of water is secreted and very nearly as much is reabsorbed every 24 hours - this mechanism allows the absorption into the bloodstream of soluble metabolites from digested food.

Typical values for the daily gains and losses of water in an average man in a temperate climate are:
 

Intake

Volume
ml per day

Output Volume
ml per day
Drink 1300 Urine 1500
Food 850 Expired Air 400
Metabolic Water 350 Skin 500
    Faeces 100

Total

2500

Total

2500

 

In a state of diarrhoeal disease the balance is upset and much more water is secreted than is reabsorbed causing a net loss to the body which can be as high as several litres a day. In addition to water, sodium is also lost. The body's store of sodium (in the form of sodium ions Na+) is almost entirely in solution in body fluids and blood plasma, i.e., extra cellular - by contrast 98% of the body's total potassium (K+) is held within cells i.e. intra-cellular.

Approximate concentrations of the principal ions in plasma, interstitial, and intracellular fluids in an average man are:
  

  Plasma Interstitial
fluid
Intracellular
fluid
Cations (mmol per litre      
Sodium 140 144 10
Potassium 4 4 155
Calcium 2.5 2 1
Magnesium 1 1 15
Anions (mmol per litre)      
Chloride 102 114 5
Bicarbonate 27 30 10
Phosphate 1 1 50
Sulphate 0.5 0.5 10
Protein 2 0.1 8
Organic Anions 3 6 2

 

The concentration of Na+ in the extracellular fluid has to be held to within close limits (135-150 mmol/l) for the proper functioning of the body. This may perhaps correspond with the salinity of the archaic seas from which the ancestors of present land mammals emerged eons ago. This sodium concentration is normally precisely controlled by the renal function, however in a state of dehydration water is conserved by anuria and the sodium regulation cannot work effectively.

Thus continued diarrhoea causes rapid depletion of water and sodium, which is to say a state of dehydration. If more than 10% of the body's fluid is lost death occurs.

The approximate distribution of body water in an average man is:

Compartment Volume in litres %of total body water Total body water 42 100 Extracellular 17 40 Plasma 3.2 7.6 Interstitial 12.8 30 Transcellular 1 2.4 Intracellular 25 60
 

Compartment

Volume
litres

% of total
body water

Total body water 42 100
Extracellular 17 40
Plasma 3.2 7.6
Interstitial 12.8 30
Transcellular 1 2.4
Intracellular 25 60

 

Simple giving a saline solution (water plus Na+) by mouth has no beneficial effect because the normal mechanism by which Na+ is absorbed by the healthy intestinal wall is impaired in the diarrhoeal state and if the Na+ is not absorbed neither can the water be absorbed. In fact. Excess Na+ in the lumen of the intestine causes increased secretion of water and the diarrhoea worsens.

If glucose (also called dextrose) is added to a saline solution a new mechanism comes into play. The glucose molecules are absorbed through the intestinal wall - unaffected by the diarrhoeal disease state - and in conjunction sodium is carried through by a co-transport coupling mechanism. This occurs in a 1:1 ratio, one molecule of glucose co-transporting one sodium ion (Na+).

It was the discovery of this mechanism of co-transport of sodium and glucose which the lancet described as "potentially the most important medical advance this century" ( ORT is in fact the practical realisation of this potential).

It should be noted that glucose does not co-transport water - rather it is the now increased relative concentration of Na+ across the intestinal wall which pulls water through after it.

Several other molecules apart from glucose have a similar capacity to co-transport Na+ including: 

Research is currently being carried on to utilize these additive effects to develop a multi-component "Super ORS".  
  • aminoacids (e.g. glycine)
     
  • dipeptides
     
  • trpeptides

and the absorbtion of these molecules nay occur independently of each other at different sites - thus their effect can be additive. Research is currently being carried on to utilize these additive effects to develop a multi-component "Super ORS".


Starch is metabolised in the intestine to glucose and therefore it has the same properties of enhancing sodium absorbtion, however it has an added advantage that it has less osmotic effect, which would act to pull water back into the lumen of the intestine.

THE COMPOSITION OF ORS.

In deciding the optimal composition of an oral rehydration solution the following considerations must apply:

  1. Sodium - losses of sodium in the stool range from 50-60 meg/l to well over 100 meg/l in cholera and in fact total body depletion of sodium nay be higher than stool losses alone indicate. For this reason a Na+ concentration of 90 meg/l is considered an optimal figure for replenishing Na+ in dehydration from diarrhoea caused by any etiology and in all age groups from neonates to adults.

    For some years there was controversy over optimum concentration of sodium in oral rehydration fluids, which stemmed from the fact that in the early days of its use, particularly in USA, causes of hypernatraemia (excess sodium ) occurred fairly frequently in infants given oral rehydration therapy.

    The apparently obvious answer was to assume that the sodium concentration in the oral rehydration fluid used was too high and to reduce it (even to as low as 25 or 30 meg/l). Unfortunately, the apparently obvious was not the correct answer - actually nearly all these children were being given high- solute infant formula which tended to make them hypernatraemic to start with and the oral rehydration solution used then contained excess glucose - up to 8% - which was added to provide extra nutritive calories. Unfortunately, the excess glucose cause osmotic diarrhoea which precipitated acute hypernatraemia in these children.

    The less obvious but correct answer was to reduce the glucose content not the sodium - we now recognize that the sodium and glucose should be in a 1:1 ratio in terms of molarity.

    Experience has now shown that even hypernatraemic neonates with dehydration can be successfully rehydrated and made normonatraemic using the standard WHO / UNICEF ORS formula (with 90 meg/l Na+) when the water intake is sufficient to ensure normal kidney function and hence physiological regulation of the sodium concentration in the plasma.
    Although ORS with a sodium content of around 50 meq/l is sufficient for maintenance of hydration of a normally will-nourished child with diarrhoea it would be inadequate for rehydration of a patient with a secretary diarrhoea (e.g., cholera) losing considerable sodium in the stool.
  2. Glucose should be close to equivalent with the Na+ content - it is 111 mmol/l in the WHO / UNICEF formula, which happens to be exactly 2%. It should be noted that if glucose is present in excess of 3% it will cause further losses of water through osmotic effects, this would also upset the electrolyte balance, sine increased water losses will result in hypernatraemia.
  3. We have not yet given more than a passing mention to potassium. Although as we saw 98% of the body's potassium is held within the cells repeated diarrhoeal attacks over a period of time will cause a chronic loss of potassium - this results in muscular weakness, lethargy and anorexia. The typical distended abdomen of a chronically malnourished child is caused by loss of muscle tone in the abdominal wall largely due to chronic depletion of potassium . The kidneys are unable to conserve potassium as they do sodium, and there is a continuous obligatory loss of potassium of about 10 mmol daily In the urine, in addition to the larger losses in the stool.

    Potassium is not involved in any way in the sodium/glucose co-transport mechanism and is absorbed passively. Restoration of potassium levels is therefore achieved more slowly than sodium and water restoration. A potassium concentration of 20 mmol/l is considered optimal for the purpose.

    Simple mixtures of sugar , salt and water or starch, salt and water contain no potassium and cannot restore potassium depletion - hence these mixtures are an "incomplete" formula and further potassium supplementation is definitely necessary for a child who suffers repeated attacks of diarrhoea.

    A potassium-rich diet including e.g. bananas or coconut water can be helpful but an ORS solution containing potassium is therapeutically more effective - in order to produce a significant effect it is necessary to provide potassium-rich foods in reasonable large quantities over a period of time.

    Restoring a potassium deficit promotes a feeling of well-being and stimulates the appetite and activity of the child. If additional food is provided over several weeks an increase in weight gain will occur and the status of the child's health will improve markedly dietary intake are needed to achieve this .
  4. Electrolyte imbalance and fluid loss also causes metabolic acidosis. These effects are more critical in the case of infants, as their renal function is not fully developed and they have a large surface area in ratio to body weight and a higher metabolic rate. Acidosis is corrected by the addition of bicarbonate (or another base such as citrate) to the ORS formula.

Electrolyte content of stool in acute diarrhoea and the electrolyte and glucose content of ORS solution:

 

  Na+ K+ Cl- HCO3
Cholera        
adults 140 13 104 44
children (less than 5 yrs.) 101 27 92 32
Enteritis        
children (less than 5 yrs.) 56 25 55 14

 

  Glucose Na+ K+ cl- HCO3
ORS Solution 111 90 20 80 30


(values expressed as mmol/l)

The causative pathogens of diarrhoeal disease (which are very numerous, more than 30) in some cases not only produce the secretion of water and sodium but also damage the intestinal wall. The normal healthy intestine is covered on its inner surface with very numerous tiny hairs, or villi, the surface cells of which are involved in the absorbtion of metabolites from ingested food. There is a difference between the cells of the tips of the villi and the cells of the base in their absorbtive functions.

Pathogens, e.g., rotavirus, may strip the tips of the villi from large patches of the intestinal wall thus decreasing the surface area and decreasing by more than 50% the specific absorbtive capacities of the intestine. The result is malabsorbtion which can cause malnutrition - most especially in a child already nutritionally compromised by repeated previous attacks of diarrhoea.

Withholding food, even for one or two days, greatly exacerbates the malnutrition; this coupled with anorexia, caused partly by chronic potassium depletion, causes a vicious circle, i.e. diarrhoea causing malnutrition and malnutrition causing ever more frequent and severe diarrhoea. It is this diarrhoea/malnutrition cycle rather than acute dehydration that causes almost half of the five million deaths a year in under five year old children that are associated with diarrhoeal disease.



 

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