Hyponatremia
Background
Low = <135meq/L
Low! = <120MEQ/L
Diagnosis
- Correct for glu/lipid/protein
- see med calc 'Change in plasma Na'
DDX
A. Hypovolemic
1. Extrarenal losses (UNa <20)
a. Sweating
b. Vomiting
c. Diarrhea
d. Third-spacing
i. Burns
ii. Peritonitis
iii. Pancreatitis
2. Renal losses (UNa >20)
a. Diruetics
b. Addison's
c. Ketonuria
d. RTA
e. Osmotic diruresis
B. Euvolemic (UNa >20 meq/L)
1. SIADH
a. CNS
b. Lung
c. CA
d. Pain
e. Drugs
2. H2O intoxication
C. Hypervolemic
1. Renal failure (UNa >20)
2. Cirrhosis, CHF, RF (UNa < 20)
D. Pseudo
1. Hyperprotein
2. Hyperlipid
3. Hyperglyc
4. Mannitol
Treatment
1) Correct volume deficit (NS)
2) For severe (<120 with CNS changes):
3% NS (513meq/L) @ 100 mL/hr x 3 hrs (70kg person)**
2) For sz, tx with nl regimen (benzos) + bolus 1.5cc/kg of 3% over 10min; repeat Q10min until sz stops (max total = 6cc/kg), then tx as asympt
- Non-70kg persons:
(kg x 0.6)/513 = cc/hr 3%
- Rapid correction can cause CHF & central pontine myelinolysis (AMS, dysphagia, dysarthria, paresis)
NA DEFICIT (for later replacement)
Na Deficit (meq) = kg x 0.6 x (140 - Na)
Give 1/3 total def rapidly in severe sx
- OR (Desired Na - Measured Na)(0.6)(wt in kg)= mEq Na administered
NS = 154 meq/L
3% = 513 meq/L
EXAMPLE:
desired Na- 120
measure Na- 100
(120-100)(.6)(70kg)=840 meq
- if 513meq in 1L, then 840 meq in 1.6L. Correct over 24hr, so 68cc hypertonic Na/ hr for 24 hrs
Asympt = max inc 0.5meq/L/hr (12meq/L/dy)
Sympt = 1-2 meq/L/hr
- Do not correct to >120 meq/l or >20 meq/l in 24 hr
Disposition
Admit Na < 125
Source
2/4/06 DONALDSON (adapted from Tintinalli, Mistry)
