International guidelines designed to minimize the risk of complications that can occur when correcting severe hyponatremia have been widely accepted for a decade. On the basis of the results of a recent large retrospective study of patients hospitalized with hyponatremia, it has been suggested that hyponatremia guidelines have gone too far in limiting the rate of rise of the serum sodium concentration; the need for therapeutic caution and frequent monitoring of the serum sodium concentration has been questioned. These assertions are reminiscent of a controversy that began many years ago.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article will discuss the consequences of chronic hyponatremia. In conditions such as cancer, heart failure, liver cirrhosis, or chronic kidney disease, the presence and magnitude of hypotonic hyponatremia are considered to reflect the severity of the underlying disease and are associated with increased morbidity as well as mortality. Hyponatremia can be acute (<48 h) or chronic (>2-3 days).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Chronic hyponatremia is known to be associated with osteoporosis. It has been shown that chronic hyponatremia increases bone resorption in an attempt to release body stores of exchangeable sodium by different mechanisms. We wanted to know the calciuria of patients with hyponatremia of different origins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: We previously reported that for around 5% of patients hospitalized with hyponatremia, it was related to what is called “transient renal salt wasting” (TRSW). In the present study we ask whether TRSW can also be observed in patients without hyponatremia. Methods: In this observational retrospective study we analyze the urine solute excretion of 200 consecutive normonatremic patients with normal kidney function and admitted in our department over one year.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Chronic hyponatremia has been reported to be associated with low solute intake and low creatinine excretion (reflecting likely sarcopenia). We wanted to study the effect, on the long term, of correction of hyponatremia on solute and creatinine excretion in chronic SIADH.
Methods: We made a retrospective review of clinical and biochemical data of patients with euvolemic hyponatremia.