Hyponatremia
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The electrolyte disturbance hyponatremia or hyponatraemia exists in humans when the sodium level in the plasma falls below 135 mmol/l. At lower levels water intoxication may result, an urgently dangerous condition. Hyponatremia is an abnormality that can occur in isolation or, as most often is the case, as a complication of other medical illnesses. In the case of other mammals, particularly agricultural animals, different indications are relevant. The following refers to humans; an introduction to the sodium deficiency is appended for bovines.
Symptoms
Most patients are asymptomatic of the hyponatremia, but may have symptoms related to the underlying cause.Severe hyponatremia may cause osmotic shift of water from the plasma into the brain cells. Typical symptoms include nausea, vomiting, headache and malaise. As the hyponatremia worsens, confusion, stupor or coma may occur. Since nausea is, itself, a stimulus for the release of ADH (the water retaining hormone), the potential for a vicious cycle of hyponatremia and its symptoms exists.
Causes
An abnormally low plasma sodium level is best considered in conjunction with the person's plasma osmolarity and extracellular fluid volume status.Most cases of hyponatremia are associated with reduced plasma osmolarity. In fact, the vast majority of adult cases are due to increased ADH activity (ADH being a hormone that causes retention of water, but not salt). Hence, the patient with hyponatremia can be viewed as the patient with increased ADH activity. It is the physician's task to identify the cause of the increased ADH activity in each case.
In patients who are volume depleted (i.e. their blood volume is too low), ADH secretion is increased (since volume depletion is a potent stimulus for ADH secretion). As a result, the kidneys of such patients hold on to water and produce a very concentrated urine. Treatment is simple (if not without risk) - simply restore the patient's blood volume thereby turning off the stimulus for ongoing ADH release and water retention.
Some patients with hyponatremia have normal blood volume. In those patients, the increased ADH activity and subsequent water retention may be due to "physiologic" causes of ADH release such as pain or nausea. Alternatively, they may have the Syndrome of Inappropriate ADH (SIADH). SIADH represents the sustained, non-physiologic release of ADH and most often occurs as a side effect of certain medicines, lung problems such as pneumonia or abscess, brain disease, or certain cancers (most often small cell lung carcinoma).
A third group of patients with hyponatremia are often said to be "hypervolemic". They are identified by the presence of peripheral edema. In fact, the term "hypervolemic" is misleading since their blood volume is actually low. The edema underscores the fact that fluid has left the circulation (i.e. the edema represents fluid that has exited the circulation and settled in dependent areas). Since such patients do, in fact, have reduced blood volume, and since reduced blood volume is a potent stimulus for ADH release, it is easy to see why they have retained water and become hyponatremic. Treatment of these patients involves treating the underlying disease that caused the fluid to leak out of the circulation in the first place. In many cases, this is easier said than done when one recognizes that the responsible underlying conditions are diseases such as liver cirrhosis or heart failure - conditions that are notoriously difficult to manage, let alone cure.
It is worth considering separately, the hyponatremia that occurs in the setting of diuretic use. Patients taking diuretic medications such as furosemide (Lasix), hydrochlorothiazide, chlorthalidone, etc., become volume depleted. That is to say that their diuretic medicine, by design, has caused their kidneys to produce more urine than they would otherwise make. This extra urine represents blood volume that is no longer there, that has been lost from the body. As a result, their blood volume is reduced. As mentioned above, lack of adequate blood volume is a potent stimulus for ADH secretion and thence water retention.
A recent surge in death from hyponatremia has been attributed to overintake of water while under the influence of MDMA. Also, Almond et al.Almond CS et al. (2005) Hyponatremia among runners in the Boston Marathon. N Engl J Med, 352(15):1550-6. PMID 15829535 found hyponatremia in as many as 13% of runners in a recent Boston Marathon, with life-threatening hyponatremia (serum Na below 120 mmol/L) in 0.6%. The runners at greatest risk of serious water intoxication had moderate weight gain during the race due to excessive water consumption (see reference).
Pseudohyponatremia
A normal or high plasma osmolarity with hyponatremia is called pseudohyponatremia. Pseudohyponatremia may be caused if high lipid levels in the plasma interfere with the sodium assay, or if a different solute (such as glucose) is abnormally abundant.Hypoosmolar hyponatremia
When the plasma osmolarity is low, the extracellular fluid volume status may be in one of three states:- Low volume. Loss of water is accompanied by loss of sodium.
- *Excessive sweating
- *Burns
- *Vomiting
- *Diarrhea
- *Urinary loss
- **Diuretic drugs (especially thiazides)
- **Addison's disease
- **Cerebral salt-wasting syndrome
- **Other salt-wasting kidney diseases
Because of the risk of CPM, patients with low volume hyponatremia may eventually require water infusion as well as volume replacement. Doing so lessens the chance of a too rapid increase of the serum sodium level as blood volume rises and ADH levels fall.
- Normal volume.
- *SIADH (syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone)
- *Some cases of psychogenic polydipsia
- High volume. There is retention of water.
- *Congestive heart failure
- *Hypothyroidism and hypocortisolism
- *Liver cirrhosis
- *Nephrotic syndrome
- *Psychogenic polydipsia
Severe hyponatremia may result from a few hours of heavy exercise in high temperature conditions, such as hiking in desert areas, or from endurance athletic events when electrolytes are not supplied. (Such an incident notably happened to long-distance athlete Craig Barrett in 1998).
Bovines
Sodium deficiency exists in grazing animals where soil sodium levels have been depleted by leeching. This is more common in mountainous regions. Agricultural science research conducted in the northern Thai highlands in the 1970s found that an endemic sodium deficiency masked all other nutrient deficiencies across all seasons and reduced productivity. Sodium supplementation increased liveweight gain by around 30% and also reproductive rates by around 30%. Simple salt supplementation is now recommended in this region and neighbouring mountains, as both a herd management tool and for increased productivity (see sources below).See also
Reference
Sources
- eMedicine [emerg/275]
- [Sports Medicine]
- [honoluluclub]
- DDB [6483]
- Lindsay Falvey (1979) 'Factors Limiting Cattle Production in the Northern Thailand Highlands'. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Queensland, Australia.
External links
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