Hyponatremia: Difference between revisions
From IDWiki
m (Text replacement - ">=" to "≥") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== Etiologies == |
|||
* Medications: [[thiazide]] and thiazide-type diuretics, [[mannitol]], [[IVIG]], [[desmopressin]] (dDAVP), [[ecstasy]] (methylenedioxymethamphetamine), and some antidepressants, antiepileptics, and antipsychotics |
|||
==Differential Diagnosis== |
==Differential Diagnosis== |
||
Line 24: | Line 28: | ||
* Measure serum osmolality and urea level |
* Measure serum osmolality and urea level |
||
** Sosm ≥ 280: normotonic/hypertonic |
** Sosm ≥ 280: normotonic/hypertonic |
||
*** Ddx includes pseudohyponatremia (from hyperlipidemia, hyperparaproteinemia, etc.), or presence of osmotically active substances (glucose, mannitol) |
*** Ddx includes [[pseudohyponatremia]] (from [[hyperlipidemia]], [[hyperparaproteinemia]], etc.), or presence of osmotically active substances ([[glucose]], [[mannitol]]) |
||
** Sosm <280 mOsm/kg: true hyponatremia |
** Sosm <280 mOsm/kg: true hyponatremia |
||
*** Measure urine osmolality |
*** Measure urine osmolality |
||
*** Uosm <100 mOsm/kg: normal water excretion |
*** Uosm <100 mOsm/kg: normal water excretion |
||
**** Primary |
**** [[Primary polydipsea]] or [[reset osmostat syndrome]] |
||
*** Uosm ≥ 100 mOsm/kg: impaired water excretion |
*** Uosm ≥ 100 mOsm/kg: impaired water excretion |
||
**** Exclude hypothyroidism and adrenal insufficiency with morning cortisol and TSH |
**** Exclude [[hypothyroidism]] and [[adrenal insufficiency]] with morning cortisol and TSH |
||
**** Measure urine sodium |
**** Measure urine sodium |
||
**** UNa < 20 mmol/L: hypovolemia, including EABV depletion (heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome) |
**** UNa < 20 mmol/L: [[hypovolemia]], including EABV depletion ([[heart failure]], [[cirrhosis]], [[nephrotic syndrome]]) |
||
**** UNa > 40 mmol/L: SIADH, reset ostmostat, renal salt wasting |
**** UNa > 40 mmol/L: [[SIADH]], [[Reset ostmostat syndrome|reset ostmostat]], renal salt wasting |
||
***** Salt supplementation and water restriction |
***** Salt supplementation and water restriction |
||
***** Normal serum urate and reduced FEurate: SIADH |
***** Normal serum urate and reduced FEurate: SIADH |
||
Line 40: | Line 44: | ||
***** Bolus 2L/day normal saline for 2 days and trend sodium |
***** Bolus 2L/day normal saline for 2 days and trend sodium |
||
***** If SNa increases by ≥ 5 mmol/L: hypovolemia |
***** If SNa increases by ≥ 5 mmol/L: hypovolemia |
||
***** If SNa increases by <5 mmol/L: SIADH or reset ostmostat |
***** If SNa increases by <5 mmol/L: [[SIADH]] or [[Reset ostmostat syndrome|reset ostmostat]] |
||
****** FEurea >55%, serum urate <0.24, and FEurate >10%: SIADH |
****** FEurea >55%, serum urate <0.24, and FEurate >10%: SIADH |
||
****** Oral or IV water-loading test: |
****** Oral or IV water-loading test: [[Reset ostmostat syndrome|reset ostmostat]] |
||
==Further Reading== |
==Further Reading== |
Revision as of 16:32, 6 May 2023
Etiologies
- Medications: thiazide and thiazide-type diuretics, mannitol, IVIG, desmopressin (dDAVP), ecstasy (methylenedioxymethamphetamine), and some antidepressants, antiepileptics, and antipsychotics
Differential Diagnosis
- Pseudohyponatremia from lab error
- Translational hyponatremia from mannitol or hyperglycemia
- Hypovolemic
- UNa >20: Renal losses, including mineralocorticoid deficiency
- UNa <10: Non-renal losses
- Euvolemic
- Uosm >100: SIADH, hypothyroidism, glucocorticoid deficiency
- Uosm <100: Primary polydipsia, low solute intake
- Uosm variable: Reset osmostat
- Hypervolemic
- UNa <10: CHD, cirrhosis, nephrosis
- UNa >20: Renal failure
Investigations
- Serum and urine osmolality and electrolytes (prior to treatment)
- TSH and AM cortisol
Diagnosis by Lab Criteria
- Serum Na <134?
- Measure serum osmolality and urea level
- Sosm ≥ 280: normotonic/hypertonic
- Ddx includes pseudohyponatremia (from hyperlipidemia, hyperparaproteinemia, etc.), or presence of osmotically active substances (glucose, mannitol)
- Sosm <280 mOsm/kg: true hyponatremia
- Measure urine osmolality
- Uosm <100 mOsm/kg: normal water excretion
- Uosm ≥ 100 mOsm/kg: impaired water excretion
- Exclude hypothyroidism and adrenal insufficiency with morning cortisol and TSH
- Measure urine sodium
- UNa < 20 mmol/L: hypovolemia, including EABV depletion (heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome)
- UNa > 40 mmol/L: SIADH, reset ostmostat, renal salt wasting
- Salt supplementation and water restriction
- Normal serum urate and reduced FEurate: SIADH
- Hypouricemia and unchanged FEurate: renal salt wasting
- UNa between 20 and 40 mmol/L
- Bolus 2L/day normal saline for 2 days and trend sodium
- If SNa increases by ≥ 5 mmol/L: hypovolemia
- If SNa increases by <5 mmol/L: SIADH or reset ostmostat
- FEurea >55%, serum urate <0.24, and FEurate >10%: SIADH
- Oral or IV water-loading test: reset ostmostat
- Sosm ≥ 280: normotonic/hypertonic
Further Reading
- Milionis HJ, Liamis GL, and Elisaf MS. The hyponatremic patient: a systematic approach to laboratory diagnosis. CMAJ. 2002;166(8):1056-1062.