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Intensive care management of severe hyponatraemia—an observational study

Intensive care management of severe hyponatraemia—an observational study
Intensive care management of severe hyponatraemia—an observational study

Background and subject: hyponatraemia is a common electrolyte disorder. For patients with severe hyponatraemia, intensive care unit (ICU) admission may be required. This will enable close monitoring and allow safe management of sodium levels effectively. While severe hyponatraemia may be associated with significant symptoms, rapid overcorrection of hyponatraemia can lead to complications. We aimed to describe the management and outcomes of severe hyponatraemia in our ICU and identify risk factors for overcorrection. 

Materials and methods: this was a retrospective single-centre cohort that included consecutive adults admitted to the ICU with serum sodium < 120 mmol/L between 1 January 2017 and 8 March 2023. Anonymised data were collected from electronic records. We included 181 patients (median age 67 years, 51% male). Results: Median admission serum sodium was 113 mmol/L (IQR: 108–117), with an average rate of improvement over the first 48 h of 10 mmol/L/day (IQR: 5–15 mmol/L). A total of 62 patients (34%) met the criteria for overcorrection at 48 h, and they were younger, presented with severe symptoms (seizures/arrythmias), and had lower admission sodium concentration. They were more likely to be treated with hypertonic saline infusions. Lower admission sodium was an independent risk factor for overcorrection within 48 h, whereas the presence of liver cirrhosis and fluid restriction was associated with normal correction. No difference was identified between the normal and overcorrected cohorts for ICU/hospital length of stay or mortality. 

Conclusions: in some patients with severe hyponatraemia, overcorrection is inevitable to avoid symptoms such as seizures and arrhythmias, and consequently, we highlight the key factors associated with overcorrection. Overall, we identified that overcorrection was common and concordant with the current literature.

hyponatraemia, intensive care, osmotic demyelination syndrome, overcorrection
1010-660X
Roe, Thomas
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Brown, Mark
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Watson, Adam J.R.
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Panait, Bianca-Atena
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Potdar, Nachiket
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Sadik, Amn
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Vohra, Shiv
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Haydock, David
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Beecham, Ryan
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Dushianthan, Ahilanandan
013692a2-cf26-4278-80bd-9d8fcdb17751
Roe, Thomas
cc2b4fda-b121-44a0-a4c0-32c3df49ffd3
Brown, Mark
f87c84c9-8b4c-4eb8-9151-7cbd51cbb46c
Watson, Adam J.R.
502a836d-bf39-47cb-8240-318034005e9a
Panait, Bianca-Atena
67b09283-2400-4ec7-8404-fed088948bc0
Potdar, Nachiket
34db5044-3c20-497c-ba28-3d7ab1fd98a3
Sadik, Amn
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Vohra, Shiv
f6b83dc6-79ce-4534-85e8-669933a03556
Haydock, David
f3dbd0ef-685b-49fb-84cb-2307f26e5ae2
Beecham, Ryan
f930648f-5bcb-4c56-ae34-61db6d54b251
Dushianthan, Ahilanandan
013692a2-cf26-4278-80bd-9d8fcdb17751

Roe, Thomas, Brown, Mark, Watson, Adam J.R., Panait, Bianca-Atena, Potdar, Nachiket, Sadik, Amn, Vohra, Shiv, Haydock, David, Beecham, Ryan and Dushianthan, Ahilanandan (2024) Intensive care management of severe hyponatraemia—an observational study. Medicina, 60 (9), [1412]. (doi:10.3390/medicina60091412).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and subject: hyponatraemia is a common electrolyte disorder. For patients with severe hyponatraemia, intensive care unit (ICU) admission may be required. This will enable close monitoring and allow safe management of sodium levels effectively. While severe hyponatraemia may be associated with significant symptoms, rapid overcorrection of hyponatraemia can lead to complications. We aimed to describe the management and outcomes of severe hyponatraemia in our ICU and identify risk factors for overcorrection. 

Materials and methods: this was a retrospective single-centre cohort that included consecutive adults admitted to the ICU with serum sodium < 120 mmol/L between 1 January 2017 and 8 March 2023. Anonymised data were collected from electronic records. We included 181 patients (median age 67 years, 51% male). Results: Median admission serum sodium was 113 mmol/L (IQR: 108–117), with an average rate of improvement over the first 48 h of 10 mmol/L/day (IQR: 5–15 mmol/L). A total of 62 patients (34%) met the criteria for overcorrection at 48 h, and they were younger, presented with severe symptoms (seizures/arrythmias), and had lower admission sodium concentration. They were more likely to be treated with hypertonic saline infusions. Lower admission sodium was an independent risk factor for overcorrection within 48 h, whereas the presence of liver cirrhosis and fluid restriction was associated with normal correction. No difference was identified between the normal and overcorrected cohorts for ICU/hospital length of stay or mortality. 

Conclusions: in some patients with severe hyponatraemia, overcorrection is inevitable to avoid symptoms such as seizures and arrhythmias, and consequently, we highlight the key factors associated with overcorrection. Overall, we identified that overcorrection was common and concordant with the current literature.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 August 2024
Published date: 29 August 2024
Keywords: hyponatraemia, intensive care, osmotic demyelination syndrome, overcorrection

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495357
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495357
ISSN: 1010-660X
PURE UUID: ad6f093e-4c2a-4399-af79-db0d3ca56601
ORCID for Ahilanandan Dushianthan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0165-3359

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Date deposited: 11 Nov 2024 18:13
Last modified: 12 Nov 2024 03:00

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Contributors

Author: Thomas Roe
Author: Mark Brown
Author: Adam J.R. Watson
Author: Bianca-Atena Panait
Author: Nachiket Potdar
Author: Amn Sadik
Author: Shiv Vohra
Author: David Haydock
Author: Ryan Beecham
Author: Ahilanandan Dushianthan ORCID iD

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