Hyponatremia

From IDWiki
Revision as of 15:16, 6 April 2026 by Aidan (talk | contribs) (Management)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Background

  • Decrease in serum sodium concentration, often reflecting an increase in total free water
  • May be mild (130-135 mmol/L), moderate (125-129 mmol/L), or severe (<125 mmol/L)
  • May be acute (onset within 48 hours) or chronic (onset greater than 48 hours), or unknown (usually presumed chronic)

Etiologies

By Volume Status

By Acuity

  • Acute (less than 48 hours): postoperative, post-prostate resection, post-endoscopic uterine surgery, polydipsia, exercise, recent thiazide start, MDMA/Ecstasy, colonoscopy prep, cyclophosphamide (IV), oxytocin, recent desmopressin/terlipressin/vasopressin

Pathophysiology

  • Depends on cause, but many act through the activation of water retention but activating baroreceptor-mediated vasopressin release from the pituitary
  • Hypovolemic
    • Non-renal sodium loss:
      • Severe diarrhea: kidneys attempt to retain sodium
      • Vomiting: metabolic alkalosis causes renal sodium loss, accompanied by chloride and ammonium
      • Skin losses (sweating, cystic fibrosis, extensive burns)
    • Renal sodium loss:
      • Diuretics: volume depletion leading to vasopressin release, or direct induction of vasopressin
      • Primary adrenal insufficiency: hypoaldosteronism leading to renal sodium loss
      • Cerebral salt wasting (SAH)
      • Intrinsic kidney dysfunction: tubulopathy after chemotherapy, analgesic nephropathy, medullary cystic kidney disease, some drugs
    • Third-spacing (bowel obstruction, pancreatitis, sepsis, muscle trauma): decreases effective circulating volume causing vasopressin release
      • May be worsened by infusion of hypotonic fluids
  • Euvolemic
    • SIADH (multiple causes, including GA, nausea, pain, stress, and many drugs): vasopressin secreted inappropriately from pituitary or ectopic production
    • Secondary adrenal insufficiency: decreased ACTH leads to hypocortisolism, leading to vasopressin release; aldosterone production less impaired than primary AI
    • Hypothyroidism: rare and mild cause, with approximately 0.14 mmol/L decrease in SNa for every 10 mU/L increase in TSH
    • High water and low solute intake ("tea and toast", beer potomania, anorexia nervosa): not enough solute for the kidneys to be able to excrete the amount of water needed
  • Hypervolemic
    • Intrinsic kidney dysfunction (CKD, tubular injury): kidney loses the ability to dilute urine (i.e. excrete free water)
    • Heart failure: effective circulating volume decreases, leading to vasopression secretion and activation of RAS system
    • Liver failure: decreased effective circulating volume, leading to vasopressin release
    • Nephrotic syndrome: decreased serum oncotic pressure leading to decrease blood volume and secretion of vasopressin

Clinical Manifestations

  • Depends on acuity and severity
  • Mild, chronic symptoms can include gait abnormalities, increased falls, and cognitive deficits
  • Moderately symptomatic: nausea, confusion, headache
  • Severely symptomatic: vomiting, cardiorespiratory distress, abnormal deep sleep, seizures, and coma

Investigations

  • Serum and urine sodium, and serum and urine osmolality (prior to treatment)
  • TSH and AM cortisol
  • Glucose: accounts for 2.4 mmol/L of urine for every 5.5 mmol of glucose above baseline of 5.5 (i.e. adjust by 2.4 x (glucose - 5.5)/5.5)

Diagnosis by Lab Criteria

  • Measure serum osmolality (Sosm) and urea level (Surea)
  • Sosm ≥ 280: normotonic/hypertonic
  • Sosm <280 mOsm/kg: true hyponatremia
    • Measure urine osmolality (Uosm)
    • Uosm <100 mOsm/kg: normal water excretion with maximally dilute urine
    • Uosm ≥ 100 mOsm/kg: impaired water excretion
      • Exclude hypothyroidism and adrenal insufficiency with morning cortisol and TSH
      • Measure urine sodium (UNa)
      • UNa < 20-30 mmol/L: hypovolemia (diarrhea, vomiting, third-spacing, remote diuretics), and other causes of low effective circulating volume (heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome)
      • UNa > 30-40 mmol/L: diuretics, kidney disease, euvolemic (SIADH, reset osmostat, secondary adrenal insufficiency, hypothyroidism, occult diuretics), and hypovolemic (renal salt wasting, diuretics, vomiting, primary adrenal insufficiency, cerebral salt wasting, occult diuretics)
        • Salt supplementation and water restriction
        • Normal Surate and reduced FEurate: SIADH
        • Hypouricemia and unchanged FEurate: renal salt wasting
      • UNa between 20 and 40 mmol/L
        • Bolus 2 L/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 osmostat
          • FEurea >55%, Surate <0.24, and FEurate >10%: SIADH
          • Oral or IV water-loading test: reset osmostat

Management

  • Depends on cause, but generally:
    • Hypovolemic: fluid resuscitation
    • Euvolemic: fluid restriction
    • Hypervolemic: fluid restriction and/or diuretics

Monitoring

  • Goal rate of correction in chronic hyponatremia should be no more than 8 mEq in 24 hours in order to reduce the risk of osmotic demyelination syndrome
  • Monitor lytes q6h initially for moderate or severe hyponatremia
  • Monitor urine output: an increased to 100+ mL/h could signal sudden suppression of vasopressin and can cause rapid increase in serum sodium (more common with hypovolemia treated with fluids)
    • Monitor serum sodium q2h until stabilized

Severe Symptoms

  • For patients with hyponatremia with severe symptoms (coma, seizure); not used for any other patients
  • Monitored setting
  • Start hypertonic saline 3% 150 mL IV bolus over 20 minutes
  • Then check serum sodium after 20 minutes, while repeating the infusion
  • Repeat process twice or until increase of 5 mmol/L, then stop

Hypovolemia

  • Restore volume status with either normal saline 0.9% of other balanced crystalloid 0.5-1 mlL/kg/h
  • In cases of shock, rapid fluid resuscitation is probably more important than controlled sodium correction
  • May need close monitoring

Hypervolemia

  • Fluid restriction

SIADH

  • All patients: fluid restriction
  • Moderate to severe: consider one or both of the following
    • Increasing solute intake with urea 0.25-0.5 g/kg p.o. daily
    • Low-dose loop diuretic plus oral sodium chloride (salt tabs)

Overcorrection

  • Should be treated with prompt decrease in serum sodium concentration if >10 mmol/L in first 24 hours or >8 mmol/L in any other 24 hour period
  • Stop current treatment
  • Discuss with Nephrology whether to start D5w 10 mL/kg IV over 1h, or to start desmopressing 2 µg (up to q8h)

Further Reading