Abstract

Hyponatremia is the most common electrolyte abnormality encountered in critically ill patients and is linked to heightened morbidity, mortality, and healthcare resource utilization. However, its causal role in these poor outcomes and the impact of treatment remain unclear. Plasma sodium is the main determinant of plasma tonicity; consequently, hyponatremia commonly indicates hypotonicity but can also occur in conjunction with isotonicity and hypertonicity. Plasma sodium is a function of total body exchangeable sodium and potassium and total body water. Hypotonic hyponatremia arises when total body water is proportionally greater than the sum of total body exchangeable cations, that is, electrolyte-free water excess; the latter is the result of increased intake or decreased (kidney) excretion. Hypotonic hyponatremia leads to water movement into brain cells resulting in cerebral edema. Brain cells adapt by eliminating solutes, a process that is largely completed by 48 h. Clinical manifestations of hyponatremia depend on its biochemical severity and duration. Symptoms of hyponatremia are more pronounced with acute hyponatremia where brain adaptation is incomplete while they are less prominent in chronic hyponatremia. The authors recommend a physiological approach to determine if hyponatremia is hypotonic, if it is mediated by arginine vasopressin, and if arginine vasopressin secretion is physiologically appropriate. The treatment of hyponatremia depends on the presence and severity of symptoms. Brain herniation is a concern when severe symptoms are present, and current guidelines recommend immediate treatment with hypertonic saline. In the absence of significant symptoms, the concern is neurologic sequelae resulting from rapid correction of hyponatremia which is usually the result of a large water diuresis. Some studies have found desmopressin useful to effectively curtail the water diuresis responsible for rapid correction.

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