AI Article Synopsis

  • Pseudohyponatremia is an artifact causing falsely low plasma sodium levels in samples with high proteins or lipids, influenced by inappropriate cutoffs for lipemia detection.
  • Researchers tested two methods to establish a more accurate lipemic cutoff for sodium: one using spiked plasma samples with Intralipid®, and another using naturally hyperlipidemic samples measured by direct methods.
  • Results showed that Intralipid® did not mimic the lipemic interference seen in pseudohyponatremia, with significant sodium deviations occurring in samples with an L-index above 700, prompting a recommendation for lower lipemia tolerance in clinical labs.

Article Abstract

Background: Pseudohyponatremia describes an artifactual decrease in plasma sodium result in samples with high proteins and/or lipids when measured by an indirect ion-selective electrode (ISE) method. We suspected that Intralipid®-based lipemia cutoffs are inappropriate for detecting interfering lipids in human samples and a major contributing factor to the existence of pseudohyponatremia.

Methods: We evaluated 2 approaches to derive a lipemia cutoff for sodium, one in which patient plasma samples were pooled and spiked to simulate hyperlipidemia using Intralipid® (commonly used approach by in-vitro diagnostics manufacturers), and another in which endogenous hyperlipidemic samples (n = 31) were measured by methods not affected by hyperlipidemia (i.e., direct ISE and post-ultracentrifugation indirect ISE). Triglycerides, lipemic index (L-index) and indirect ISE sodium concentrations of samples were measured on Roche Cobas® 8000 and direct ISE on Radiometer® ABL835 Flex analyzers. Endogenous hyperlipidemic samples were also ultracentrifuged on Beckman Coulter® Airfuge to clear excess lipids and re-analyzed for sodium by indirect ISE.

Results: We discovered that Intralipid® is not an accurate emulation of the lipemic interference seen in pseudohyponatremia because it showed no effect up to the maximum level of lipemia tested (L-index = 2000). By contrast, endogenous hyperlipidemic samples demonstrated significant deviations in sodium concentration (≥4 mmol/l) when L-index approached or exceeded 700, and a strong positive correlation between L-index and the difference between the indirect and direct methods (i.e., extent of pseudohyponatremia).

Conclusions: Clinical laboratories should lower their tolerance for lipemia from the currently recommended L-index cutoff of 2000 on Roche Cobas 8000®. We recommend reflexing to direct ISE when L-index exceeds 700. Manufacturers and laboratories with other indirect ISE methods should evaluate the effect of lipid interference on their method using hyperlipidemic human samples not Intralipid®.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cca.2021.05.032DOI Listing

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