Objective: To determine the incidence, clinical characteristics, and outcome for general medical-surgical hospital patients with hypernatremia.
Design: A prospective cohort study.
Setting: A 942-bed urban university hospital.
Patients: All patients who developed a serum sodium concentration of 150 mmol/L or greater during a 3-month observation period.
Measurements: Daily fluid balance, mental status, and serum and urine electrolytes and osmolality.
Results: 103 patients were identified. Eighteen patients were hypernatremic on hospital admission, and 85 developed hypernatremia during hospitalization. Patients who developed hypernatremia during hospitalization were younger than patients who developed hypernatremia before hospital admission (mean age +/- SD, 58.9 +/- 19.2 years compared with 76.6 +/- 16.6 years; P < 0.01) but did not differ in age from the patients of the general hospitalized population. Eighty-nine percent of patients who developed hypernatremia during hospitalization had urine concentrating defects, primarily as the result of the use of diuretics or of solute diuresis, whereas only 50% of patients who were hypernatremic on admission could be shown to have concentrating defects (P < 0.01). Fifty-five percent of all hypernatremic patients had increased insensible water losses, and 35% had increased enteral water losses. Eighty-six percent of patients with hospital-acquired hypernatremia lacked free access to water, 74% had enteral water intake of less than 1 L/d, and 94% received less than 1 L of intravenous electrolyte-free water per day during the development of hypernatremia. No supplemental electrolyte-free water was prescribed during the first 24 hours of hypernatremia in 49% of patients. The duration of hypernatremia was shorter in patients who were hypernatremic on admission (median duration, 3 days) than in patients with hospital-acquired hypernatremia (median duration, 5 days; P < 0.05). Mortality was 41% for all patients, but hypernatremia was judged to have contributed to mortality in only 16% of patients.
Conclusions: Although the development of hypernatremia before hospital admission occurs primarily in geriatric patients, hospital-acquired hypernatremia was more common in our cohort and had an age distribution similar to that of the general hospitalized population. Hospital-acquired hypernatremia was primarily iatrogenic, resulting from inadequate and inappropriate prescription of fluids to patients with predictably increased water losses and impaired thirst or restricted free water intake or both. Treatment of hypernatremia is often inadequate or delayed. Efforts to manage hypernatremia better and altogether avoid hospital-acquired hypernatremia should focus on both physician education and the development of hospital systems to prevent errors in fluid prescription.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-124-2-199601150-00002 | DOI Listing |
World Neurosurg
October 2024
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA; Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA. Electronic address:
Cureus
January 2024
Family Medicine, Ascension St. Vincent's - Riverside, Jacksonville, USA.
Hypernatremia has been significantly associated with in-hospital mortality and discharge to long-term care facilities. The appropriate correction of electrolyte disturbances, especially sodium, is important to consider to prevent the addition of central nervous system disturbances, such as cerebral edema and eventual brain injury. The importance of maintaining a proper correction of hypernatremia has been well studied and used in clinical practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med Res
September 2023
Department of Internal Medicine I - Cardiology, Nephrology and Internal Intensive Medicine Brandenburg University Hospital, Brandenburg Medical School (Theodor Fontane), Brandenburg an der Havel, Germany.
Hypernatremia (plasma sodium > 145 mmol/L) reflects impaired water balance, and affected patients can suffer from severe neurologic symptoms. Hyponatremia, on the other hand, is the most frequent electrolyte disorder in hospitals. It may be diagnosed in acute kidney injury (AKI), but hyponatremia prior to the diagnosis of AKI has also predictive or prognostic value in the short term.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Endocrinol (Oxf)
April 2024
Department of Endocrinology & Diabetes, Western Health, Victoria, Australia.
Objectives: To determine all-cause in-hospital mortality associated with severe hypernatraemia and the causes, comorbidities, time to treatment, discharge destination and postdischarge mortality.
Design: Retrospective observational cohort study.
Patients: Severe hypernatraemia, (sodium concentration ≥ 155 mmol/L), at any time during a tertiary hospital admission in Melbourne, Australia, 1 January 2019 to 31 December 2019 (pre-COVID19).
JAMA Netw Open
September 2023
Internal Medicine Division, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Importance: Hypernatremia is common among hospitalized patients and is associated with high mortality rates. Current guidelines suggest avoiding fast correction rates but are not supported by robust data.
Objective: To investigate whether there is an association between hypernatremia correction rate and patient survival.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!