Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DEXTROSE 20 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus DEXTROSE 5 AND LACTATED RINGER S IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DEXTROSE 20 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus DEXTROSE 5 AND LACTATED RINGER S IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
DEXTROSE 20% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs DEXTROSE 5% AND LACTATED RINGER'S IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Dextrose is a monosaccharide that serves as a source of calories and water for parenteral nutrition. It is oxidized to carbon dioxide and water, providing energy. Administration of hypertonic dextrose solutions increases blood glucose levels, which can stimulate insulin secretion and promote cellular glucose uptake.
Dextrose provides a source of carbohydrates for metabolism, while Lactated Ringer's solution replaces extracellular fluid and electrolytes. Lactate is converted to bicarbonate in the liver, providing buffer.
Intravenous infusion; adult dose: 500-1000 mL of 20% dextrose solution (100-200 g dextrose) administered over 1-2 hours; maximum infusion rate: 0.5 g/kg/hour. Frequency: as needed for hypoglycemia or as part of parenteral nutrition.
Intravenous infusion, dose depends on fluid and caloric needs; typical adult dose is 30-40 mL/kg/day, not to exceed 100 mL/hour in normovolemic patients without cardiac impairment.
None Documented
None Documented
Plasma half-life is approximately 2-5 minutes under normal conditions due to rapid cellular uptake and metabolism; prolonged in hyperglycemic states or renal impairment.
Dextrose: 1-2 hours (intracellular utilization); lactate: 10-20 minutes (hepatic metabolism); water and electrolytes: distribution half-life ~20-30 minutes, elimination half-life determined by renal function (normal ~2-4 hours).
Dextrose is completely metabolized to carbon dioxide and water via glycolysis and the citric acid cycle; negligible renal excretion of unchanged drug. <1% excreted unchanged in urine.
Lactate is metabolized to bicarbonate in the liver (80%) and kidneys (20%); dextrose is metabolized to CO2 and water via glycolysis and the Krebs cycle; water is excreted renally (100%), electrolytes (Na+, K+, Ca2+, Cl-) are primarily renally eliminated with minimal fecal loss (<2%).
Category C
Category C
IV Fluid
IV Fluid