Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemical Pathology, University Hospital Lewisham, Lewisham, London
2. Department of Chemical Pathology, 5th Floor Tower, Guy's Hospital, London SE1 9RT, UK
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess retrospectively the prevalence of severe hyponatremia in a hospital population and its laboratory investigation, treatment and clinical outcome. Over a 6-month period 47 patients (27 women and 20 men) were found to have a plasma sodium concentration of ≤ 120 mmol/L (this number made up less than 0·17% of all plasma sodium requests over that time period). The mean patient age was 75±16 years and the average hospital stay was 37±45 days (1–179 days). Patient mortality was 51% (women 57% and men 43%). The mean initial plasma sodium concentration was 116±4·5 mmol/L, rising after therapeutic intervention to a mean of 130±4·2 mmol/L. The mean plasma sodium correction rate was 4·7±4·3 mmol/L/24 h (0·9–17·5 range). Twelve per cent of the patients had their plasma sodium raised at a rate of greater than 10 mmol/L/24h after their initial presentation. Two patients may have had symptoms and signs suggestive of cerebral oedema/cortical dysfunction: in one patient the sodium concentration was raised at a rate of 9·5 mmol/L/24 h and in the other at 12·0 mmol/L/24h. Sixty-one per cent of the patients had a chest infection, 44% were on diuretics, 28% had congestive cardiac failure, 28% were post-operative (9% orthopaedic procedures), 19% had carcinoma and 9% were on a selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor. Regarding laboratory investigations, 56% had liver function tests, 41% had thyroid function tests, 36% had plasma osmolality determination, 36% had urinary electrolytes including urinary osmolality and < 2% had tests to exclude hypoadrenalism.
Subject
Clinical Biochemistry,General Medicine
Cited by
37 articles.
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