| Literature DB >> 34089517 |
Philip J G M Voets1, Roderick P P W M Maas2, Nils P J Vogtländer3, Karin A H Kaasjager4.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Desmopressin clamp; Equation; Hyponatremia; Osmotic demyelination syndrome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34089517 PMCID: PMC8803789 DOI: 10.1007/s40620-021-01081-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nephrol ISSN: 1121-8428 Impact factor: 3.902
Fig. 1Osmotic water movement in the brain and pathophysiology of osmotic demyelination syndrome. If the effective osmolarity of the extracellular compartment (πe.c.) is lower than the effective osmolarity of the intracellular compartment (πi.c.), water moves into the brain cells (a). This occurs in hypotonic hyponatremia. If the effective osmolarity of the extracellular compartment subsequently becomes equal to the effective osmolarity of the intracellular compartment, movement of water between both compartments ceases (b). This occurs when brain cells have adjusted their intracellular osmolarity to hypotonic hyponatremia by reducing their cytosolic solute content. If the effective osmolarity of the extracellular compartment is higher than the effective osmolarity of the intracellular compartment, water moves out of the brain cells (c). This occurs if long-standing hypotonic hyponatremia is corrected. If the water losses in (c) are large enough and occur relatively rapidly (> 8 mmol/L/day), massive lysis of glial cells may ensue, leading to osmotic demyelination syndrome (ODS). The arrow in (a) points toward the basilar part of the pons, which contains fibers of the corticospinal and corticobulbar tracts and is especially vulnerable to a rapid rise in plasma osmolarity. In addition to central pontine myelinolysis, characterized by spastic tetraparesis, dysarthria, and dysphagia, there is frequently involvement of other central nervous system structures, such as the basal ganglia and thalami (extrapontine myelinolysis) [1]
Course of the patient’s plasma sodium concentration (where (A) refers to a radial artery puncture), urine osmolarity, urine output, and intervention on the day of her admission
| Hours since admission | Plasma sodium concentration | Urine osmolarity | Urine output | Intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 95 mmol/L | 248 mOsmol/L | – | 3.0%-NaCl (bolus of 100 mL) |
| 1 | < 100 mmol/L (A) | 246 mOsmol/L | 125 mL/h | – |
| 2 | 98 mmol/L | – | 100 mL/h | Ringer’s infusate (bolus of 250 mL) |
| 3 | 98 mmol/L | – | 100 mL/h | – |
| 5 | 100 mmol/L (A) | 102 mOsmol/L | 200 mL/h | 5.0%-glucose (bolus of 1000 mL) |
| 10 | 102 mmol/L | 173 mOsmol/L | – | 2.5%-glucose/0.45%-NaCl (? mL) |
| 12 | 101 mmol/L | 252 mOsmol/L | 400 mL/h | 2.5%-glucose/0.45%-NaCl (? mL) |
| 15 | 102 mmol/L | 152 mOsmol/L | 700 mL/h | 5.0%-glucose (1000 mL/h) |
| 17 | 105 mmol/L | 46 mOsmol/L | 850 mL/h | 5.0%-glucose (? mL)/DDAVP |
| 18 | 102 mmol/L | 92 mOsmol/L | 1150 mL/h | 5.0%-glucose (? mL)/DDAVP |
| 22 | 100 mmol/L | 50 mOsmol/L | 700 mL/h | 5.0%-glucose (? mL)/DDAVP |
It can be seen that an increase in the plasma sodium concentration of 10 mmol/L occurred in the first 17 h after admission, exceeding the maximum allowable correction rate