| Literature DB >> 26237593 |
Mark J Hannon1, Christopher J Thompson2.
Abstract
Hyponatremia is a frequent electrolyte imbalance in hospital inpatients. Acute onset hyponatremia is particularly common in patients who have undergone any type of brain insult, including traumatic brain injury, subarachnoid hemorrhage and brain tumors, and is a frequent complication of intracranial procedures. Acute hyponatremia is more clinically dangerous than chronic hyponatremia, as it creates an osmotic gradient between the brain and the plasma, which promotes the movement of water from the plasma into brain cells, causing cerebral edema and neurological compromise. Unless acute hyponatremia is corrected promptly and effectively, cerebral edema may manifest through impaired consciousness level, seizures, elevated intracranial pressure, and, potentially, death due to cerebral herniation. The pathophysiology of hyponatremia in neurotrauma is multifactorial, but most cases appear to be due to the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH). Classical treatment of SIADH with fluid restriction is frequently ineffective, and in some circumstances, such as following subarachnoid hemorrhage, contraindicated. However, the recently developed vasopressin receptor antagonist class of drugs provides a very useful tool in the management of neurosurgical SIADH. In this review, we summarize the existing literature on the clinical features, causes, and management of hyponatremia in the neurosurgical patient.Entities:
Keywords: SAH; SIADH; TBI; hyponatremia; neurosurgery
Year: 2014 PMID: 26237593 PMCID: PMC4470172 DOI: 10.3390/jcm3041084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Incidence of significant hyponatremia (plasma sodium <130 mmol/L) in patients admitted to the neurosurgical unit in Beaumont Hospital between January 2002–September 2003 (adapted from [7] with permission).
| Diagnosis | No. of Patients with Plasma Sodium <130 mmol/L | Total | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Patients | 187 | 1698 | 11 |
| SAH | 62 | 316 | 19.6 |
| Tumor | 56 | 355 | 15.8 |
| TBI | 44 | 457 | 9.6 |
| Pituitary surgery | 5 | 81 | 6.2 |
| Spinal | 4 | 489 | 0.81 |
The etiology, diagnosis and basic management of neurosurgical hyponatremia.
| Diagnosis | Blood Volume Status | Diagnostic Criteria | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| SIADH | Euvolaemic | See | Fluid restriction Vaptan therapy |
| Acute ACTH deficiency | Euvolaemic (may be hypotensive) | 0900 h cortisol <300 nmol/L in stressed patient | Steroid replacement therapy |
| Hypovolaemia | Hypovolaemic | Negative fluid balance | IV fluids |
| CSWS | Hypovolaemic | Profound diuresis and natriuresis | Aggressive IV fluids |
| Mixed SIADH and CSWS | Variable/fluctuating | Usually SIADH initially, then progressing to CSWS | Depends on stage |
| Inappropriate IV fluids | Hypervolaemic | Positive fluid balance | Diuretics |
Diagnostic criteria for the diagnosis of syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) [32,33].
| 1. Hyposomolality; plasma osmolality <280 mOsm/kg |
| 2. Inappropriate urinary concentration (Uosm >100 mOsm/kg) |
| 3. Patient is clinically euvolemic |
| 4. Elevated urinary sodium (>40 mmol/L), with normal salt and water intake |
| 5. Exclude hypothyroidism and glucocorticoid deficiency―particularly in patients with neurosurgical conditions |
Figure 1Comparison of arginine vasopressin (AVP) levels before the development of hyponatremia, during the hyponatremic episode, and after resolution of hyponatremia, in patients with SIADH following Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH); AVP levels are significantly higher before and during episode of hyponatremia when compared with after resolution of hyponatremia (p = 0.03); adapt from [6] with permission.
Figure 2Comparison of AVP levels between different patient groups in patients with hyponatremia following SAH; each point represents an individual AVP measurement; adapt from [6] with permission.
Figure 3Comparison of brain natriuretic peptic (BNP) levels between different patient groups in patients with hyponatremia following SAH; each point represents an individual BNP measurement; all comparisons between groups were non significant (p > 0.05); adapt from [6] with permission.