Chronic
May be asymptomatic
History
Review patient medication list.
Physical-Exam
- Assess volume status including skin turgor, neck veins, peripheral edema, and signs of ascites
- Perform a complete neurologic exam.
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Serum sodium level:
- Recheck sodium to verify.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Electrolytes, BUN/creatinine
- Glucose:
- Correct sodium value accordingly if severe hyperglycemia (add 1.6 Na for each 100 mg/dL of glucose above normal)
- Calculate osmolality:
- Plasma osmolality = [2 × NA (mEq L) + Glucose/18 + BUN/2.8]
- Urine sodium
- Serum and urine osmolality
- Thyroid function test
- Adrenal function tests
- CPK for possible rhabdomyolysis
Imaging
- CXR to rule out CHF, infection, and tumor
- CT of head, particularly if patient has AMS
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Pseudohyponatremia due to:
- Hyperglycemia
- Hyperlipidemia
- Hyperproteinemia
- Radiocontrast dye particularly in chronic renal insufficient patients
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Establish IV
- Supportive care
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- ABCs
- Initiate IV fluid with 0.9% NS.
- Naloxone, thiamine, D
50
W (or Accu-Chek) for altered mental status
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Depends on severity and chronicity of hyponatremia and underlying etiology
- Chronic hyponatremia is to be corrected slowly to minimize osmotic demyelination syndrome. Correction should be limited to 10–12 mmol/L in 24 hr
- Acute hyponatremia with severe CNS symptoms/actively seizing:
- Goal:
- Raise serum sodium by 8–10mEq/L in 4–6 hr or to level >120–125 mEq/L with administration of hypertonic saline, slow or discontinue when seizure subsides.
- 200–400 mL of 3% saline solution will be the approximate amount needed in most adults over the 1st 2 hr
- OR may dose 1–2 mL/kg/hr of 3% saline solution
- Calculate sodium deficit:
- Na
+
deficit = 0.6 (weight in kg) (140 – Na
+
)
- Sodium contents:
- 1 L 0.9% NS = 154 mEq of sodium
- 1 L 3% saline = 513 mEq of sodium
- Hypovolemic hyponatremia:
- Correct underlying cause
- Replete volume with 0.9% NS IV.
- Primary goals to restore:
- Extracellular fluid
- Cardiac output
- Organ perfusion
- Hypervolemic/euvolemic hyponatremia:
- Water restriction to <1 L/day with high dietary salt intake
- For faster correction of sodium:
- Administer IV 0.9% NS with loop diuretic (furosemide).
- Maximum rate of correction = 0.5 mEq/L/hr
MEDICATION
- Furosemide: 20–40 mg IV push
- Sodium replacement:
- Calculate Na
+
deficit
- Replace no more than 1/2 of requirement over 8–12 hr
First Line
500 mL–1 L of saline for a fluid challenge
Second Line
- Conivaptan: Arginine vasopressin antagonist
- 20 mg IV loading dose over 30 min followed by 20 mg continuous IV infusion over 24 hr
- Tolvaptan: Selective vasopressin V2 receptor antagonist dose 15 mg/d PO and may increase in 24 hr to 30 mg
- Conivaptan and tolvaptan are for the treatment of euvolemic and hypervolemic hyponatremia only
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Symptomatic hyponatremia
- Sodium <120 mEq/L
- Asymptomatic, mild hyponatremia (Na
+
120–127 mEq/L), with comorbid factors
Discharge Criteria
- Sodium >130 mEq/L and asymptomatic
- Known chronic history of hyponatremia with no acute changes
- Asymptomatic, mild hyponatremia (Na
+
120–129 mEq/L) with no comorbid factors; however, must have close outpatient follow-up.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Have repeat serum sodium within a week, particularly if related to thiazide diuretics
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Too rapid correction may cause osmotic demyelination syndrome
- Females, alcoholics, malnourished patients, hypokalemia, and history of liver transplant are risk factors for osmotic demyelination syndrome.
- Repeat and document neurologic exam during correction.
- Beware of falsely low sodium when blood is drawn near an IV site with hypotonic fluid.
- Thiazide diuretics may cause persistent hyponatremia up to 2 wk after discontinuation.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Lien YH, Shapiro JI. Hyponatremia: Clinical diagnosis and management.
Am J Med
. 2007;120(8):653–658.
- Lin M, Liu SJ, Lim IT. Disorders of water imbalance.
Emerg Med Clin North Am
. 2005;23(3):749–770, ix.
- Palmer BF, Gates JR, Lader M. Causes and management of hyponatremia.
Ann Phamacother
. 2003;37:1694–1702.
- Pfennig CL, Slovis CM. Sodium disorders in the emergency department: A review of hyponatremia and hypernatremia.
Emerg Med Pract
. 2012;14(10):1–26.
- Verbalis JG, Goldsmith SR, Greenberg A, et al. Hyponatremia guidelines 2007: Expert panel recommendations.
Am J Med
. 2007;120(11):S1–S21.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
Hypernatremia
CODES
ICD9
- 253.6 Other disorders of neurohypophysis
- 276.1 Hyposmolality and/or hyponatremia
- 276.69 Other fluid overload
ICD10
- E22.2 Syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone
- E87.1 Hypo-osmolality and hyponatremia
- E87.79 Other fluid overload
HYPOPARATHYROIDISM
Rami A. Ahmed
•
Brad D. Gable
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Hypoparathyroidism occurs secondary to a deficiency in parathyroid hormone (PTH)
- Pseudohypoparathyroidism occurs secondary to end-organ unresponsiveness to PTH
- PTH:
- Decreases urinary Ca
2+
loss
- Increases urinary PO
4
loss
- Stimulates vitamin D conversion from 25(OH)-D to 1,25(OH)
2
-D in kidney
- Liberates Ca
2+
and PO
4
from bone
- Hypocalcemia is the major metabolic derangement
- Calcitonin:
- Promotes deposition of Ca
2+
and PO
4
into bone (produced primarily in C cells in thyroid)
- Magnesium:
- Cofactor in production of PTH
- Essential for action of PTH in target tissues
- Hypoparathyroidism:
- Primary failure of the parathyroid gland (may have associated Addison disease)
- Pseudohypoparathyroidism:
- Tissue unresponsiveness with elevated PTH levels
- Associated with hypothyroidism and hypogonadism
- Genetics:
- Congenital absence
- DiGeorge syndrome:
- Hypoparathyroidism
- Thymic dysplasia
- Severe immunodeficiency
- Wilson disease:
- Destruction of gland owing to copper deposition
- Autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type I
- Hypoparathyroidism
- Adrenal insufficiency
- Mucocutaneous candidiasis
- Albright syndrome (hereditary osteodystrophy):
- Short stature
- Obesity
- Round face
- Short neck
- Short 4th and 5th metacarpals and metatarsals (type I pseudohypoparathyroidism)