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Nephrol. Dial. Transplant. · Jan 2006
Comparative StudyDevelopment of severe hyponatraemia in hospitalized patients: treatment-related risk factors and inadequate management.
- Ewout J Hoorn, Jan Lindemans, and Robert Zietse.
- Department of Internal Medicine, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
- Nephrol. Dial. Transplant. 2006 Jan 1;21(1):70-6.
BackgroundAlthough hyponatraemia [plasma sodium (PNa)<136 mmol/l] frequently develops in hospital, risk factors for hospital-acquired hyponatraemia remain unclear.MethodsPatients who presented with severe hyponatraemia (PNa
ResultsThirty-eight patients had severe hyponatraemia on admission (PNa 121+/-4 mmol/l), whereas 36 patients had hospital-acquired severe hyponatraemia (PNa 133+/-5-->122+/-4 mmol/l). In hospital-acquired hyponatraemia, treatment started significantly later (1.0+/-2.6 vs 9.8+/-10.6 days, P<0.001) and the duration of hospitalization was longer (18.2+/-11.5 vs 30.7+/-23.4 days, P=0.01). The correction of PNa in hospital-acquired hyponatraemia was slower after both 24 h (6+/-4 vs 4+/-4 mmol/l, P=0.009) and 48 h (10+/-6 mmol/l vs 6+/-5 mmol/l, P=0.001) of treatment. Nineteen patients (26%) from both groups were not treated for hyponatraemia and this was associated with a higher mortality rate (seven out of 19 vs seven out of 55, P=0.04). Factors that contributed to hospital-acquired hyponatraemia included: thiazide diuretics (none out of 38 vs eight out of 36, P=0.002), drugs stimulating antidiuretic hormone (two out of 38 vs eight out of 36, P=0.04), surgery (none out of 38 vs 10 out of 36, P<0.001) and hypotonic intravenous fluids (one out of 38 vs eight out of 36, P=0.01). Symptomatic hyponatraemia was present in 27 patients (36%), and 14 patients died (19%).ConclusionsThe development of severe hyponatraemia in hospitalized patients was associated with treatment-related factors and inadequate management. Early recognition of risk factors and expedited therapy may make hospital-acquired severe hyponatraemia more preventable. Notes
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