AI Article Synopsis

  • A new pathophysiologic approach to hyponatremia is emerging, allowing for better identification of its various causes, including a reclassification of cerebral salt wasting (CSW) to renal salt wasting (RSW).
  • RSW and SIADH have opposite treatment goals—restricting water for SIADH and administering salt water for RSW—yet both conditions present similar clinical symptoms, necessitating careful differentiation which can be complex.
  • Research has identified a biomarker, haptoglobin-related protein, in patients with neurosurgical conditions and Alzheimer's disease, helping to correctly diagnose RSW and improve treatment strategies, while addressing the broader implications of RSW in both hyponatremic and normonatremic

Article Abstract

The subject of hyponatremia is undergoing significant changes after developing a more pathophysiologic approach that is superior to the ineffective volume approach and can more effectively identify the different causes of hyponatremia. This new approach identified cerebral salt wasting (CSW) in 24 (38%) of 62 hyponatremic patients from the medical wards of the hospital with 21 showing no evidence of cerebral disease to support our proposal to change CSW to renal salt wasting (RSW). RSW had to be differentiated from the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) because of diametrically opposite therapeutic goals of water-restricting water-logged patients with SIADH or administering salt water to volume-depleted patients with RSW. Both syndromes present with identical clinical parameters that require a difficult protocol to make such a differentiation possible. We describe rat clearance studies demonstrating natriuretic activity in the plasma of patients with neurosurgical and Alzheimer diseases (AD) and eventually identify the protein as haptoglobin-related protein without signal peptide, which can serve as a biomarker to simplify diagnosis of RSW and delivery of the proper management to improve clinical outcomes. We also discuss the introduction of a new syndrome of RSW in AD and its implications. The high prevalence of RSW and identification of the natriuretic factor have created debates over the existence of RSW with none questioning or addressing the pathophysiologic data that identified patients with RSW. We also discuss the potentially large group of patients with RSW who are normonatremic.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10846990PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.23876/j.krcp.23.092DOI Listing

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