SIADH Flashcards
1
Q
What maintain serum sodium concentration?
A
- Thirst
- ADH
- RAAS
- Renal handling
2
Q
What is the most common electrolyte abnormality in clinical practice?
A
- Hyponatraemia
3
Q
What causes SIADH?
A
- Malignancy
- small-cell lung cancer
- pancreas
- CNS disorder
- meningoencephalitis
- abcess, stroke, subarachnoid/subdural haemorrhage
- Endocrine
- hypothyroidism
- Drugs
- opiates
- psychotropics
- SSRI
- cytotoxic
4
Q
What is the Px of SIADH leading to hyponatraemia?
A
- Excessive ADH > excessive water reabsoprtion in collecting ducts
- Water dilutes Na in blood > euvolaemic hyponatraemia
- Urine becomes more concentrated > high urine osmolality
5
Q
What are the sx of SIADH?
A
- Mild - anorexia, headache, nausea, vomiting, lethargy.
- Moderate - personality change, muscle cramps and weakness, confusion, ataxia.
- Severe - drowsiness, seizures
6
Q
How would you diagnose SIADH?
A
- Urine
- Na > 20mmol/L
- osmolality > 100mosmol/kg
- Plasma
- Na < 125mmol/L
- osmolality < 260mosmol/kg
7
Q
A
8
Q
What other Ix are performed to exclude other causes?
A
- Serum potassium - if raised, think Addison’s disease
- TSH, T3, T4 - exclude hypothyroidism
- Random cortisol test
- ACTH stimulation test
9
Q
How would you mx SIADH?
A
*Treat the cause
- Correct sodium slowly - prevent central pontine myelinolysis
- >10mmol/L increase over 24h
- Salt + loop diuretics
- Fluid restrict
- Demeclocycline
- Vaptans
10
Q
What is central pontine myelinolysis (osmotic demyelination syndrome)?
A
- Cx of long term severe hyponatraemia (<120mmols/L) being treated too quickly (>10mmol/L inc in 24h)
11
Q
What is the Px of CPM?
A
- Blood Na falls > water moves by osmosis across BBB into brain cells
- Brain cells swell
- Brain adapts by reducing solutes in cells (takes few days)
- If blood Na rapidly rise > water rapidly shift out of cells into blood
- First phase: encephalopathic, confused, N & V
- Second phase: demyelination of neurones
12
Q
How will Central Pontine Myelinolysis present?
A
- spastic quadriparesis
- pseudobulbar palsy
- cognitive behavioural change