Abstract

Abstract Disclosure: A. Haider: None. M. Sadiq: None. J. Shakesprere: None. G.K. Sidhu: None. Background: Syndrome of inappropriate anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) secretion (SIADH) is characterized by inappropriate ADH secretion causing hyponatremia due to free water retention. Plasma volume expansion leads to renin inhibition by the renal juxtaglomerular complex, resulting in decreased aldosterone secretion with inappropriate natriuresis. However, when autonomous renin-independent aldosterone production is present, natriuresis can be suppressed, causing normal sodium levels despite inappropriately high ADH. Case: 58-year-old male with history of resistant hypertension & bipolar disorder on Oxcarbazepine presented with dizziness, lightheadedness, and severe hypokalemia (2.7 mmol/L, n 3.5-5.0 mmol/L). CT Adrenals revealed an incidental 1.2 cm left-sided adrenal adenoma [HU 6, 40% washout]. Serum aldosterone and plasma renin activity (PRA) were obtained in the supine position via LC/MS/MS assay; concurrent serum K+ was 3.4 mmol/L. Spironolactone was started and titrated to 50 mg BID for blood pressure control due to high suspicion of hyperaldosteronism. The patient was continued on Oxcarbazepine 900 mg BID. A 3 mg Dexamethasone suppression test showed suppressed morning cortisol (1.0 μg/dL, n <1.8 μg/dL). Urine catecholamines and metanephrines were obtained and normal. 3-4 days after starting Spironolactone, the patient developed severe subacute hyponatremia (119 mmol/L, n 135-145 mmol/L) from an admission level of 137 mmol/L. No active renal or GI losses, diuretic use, or untreated hypothyroidism were documented. Serum osmolality was low (262 mOsm/kg, n 275-295 mOsm/kg) with urine osmolality of 357 mOsm/kg (n 50-1200 mOsm/kg) and urine sodium of 92 mEq/L (n >20 mEq/L). Serum aldosterone and PRA levels returned with normal aldosterone (7 ng/dL, n 2-9 ng/dL) but suppressed PRA (0.07 ng/mL/hr, n 0.7-3.3 ng/mL/hr) and elevated aldosterone-renin ratio (100 ng/dL per ng/mL/hr, n ≤ 30 ng/dL per ng/mL/hr). As renin was very low despite mild hypokalemia and active Losartan use at the time of testing, these findings were suggestive of primary aldosteronism. In-hospital 24-hour urine aldosterone collection showed urine aldosterone of 29.3 mcg/24 h (n 5-19 mcg/24 h) with urine sodium of 93 mmol/ 24 h (n 40-220 mmol/24 h). Oxcarbazepine was subsequently tapered off; Spironolactone was intermittently held until complete discontinuation. Fluid restriction and oral salt repletion were started and the patient’s sodium ultimately normalized. Outpatient saline suppression testing and adrenal vein sampling were scheduled. Conclusion: Oxcarbazepine was likely causing high ADH release but co-occurring untreated hyperaldosteronism inhibited natriuresis. Use of Spironolactone unmasked natriuresis by blocking aldosterone activity on the intercalated cells of the renal nephron. Stopping Oxcarbazepine ultimately resulted in hyponatremia resolution. Presentation Date: Friday, June 16, 2023

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