SODIUM DISORDERS Flashcards
Imbalances in sodium affect which organ primarily?
The brain
What are the three diagnostic tests in hyponatraemia?
- Plasma osmolality
- Urinary sodium
- Urinary osmolality
Equation for plasma osmolality
Calculated osmolarity = 2 Na + Glucose + Urea (all in mmol/L)
To calculate plasma osmolality use the following equation (typical in US):
= 2[Na+] + [Glucose]/18 + [BUN]/2.8[7] where [Glucose] and [BUN] are measured in mg/dL

What would you expect plasma osmolality to be in low sodium states? What are 2 key exceptions?
Low
Hyponatraemia with high osmolality can occur in hyperglycaemia and mannitol use as substances both osmoles
First step of evaluating hyponatraemia of unknown cause?
Checking plasma osmolality

If ADH level is always high what is controlling sodium balance?
Sodium level will be determined by the amount of free water that is taken in. Increased intake of free water will easily result in hyponatraemia in these people
In the setting of hyponatraemia how do you expect normally function kidneys to respond?
Urine should be dilute: Low osmolality, low urine sodium
Indicates that cause of low sodium lies outside kidneys (ADH). Conversely, if concentrated this indicates problem with kidneys
What are the four main categories of causes of hyponatraemia?
- Heart failure, cirrhosis
- Ineffective kidneys
- High ADH
- Psychogenic polydipsia/diet
Perceived hypovolaemia causes hyponatraemia in which two conditions? What causes the perceived hypovolaemia in each condition?
- Heart failure: reduced cardiac output causes ADH release
- Cirrhosis: vasodilation + reduced systemic vascular resistance causes ADH release
BOTH CONDITIONS CAUSE NON-OSMOTIC ADH RELEASE
In someone with a hyponatraemia who is on a loop or thiazide diuretic, how do you manage?
Hold and see if sodium normalises
Why is the tendency for hyponatraemia much higher in patients taking thiazide diuretics versus loop?
- Loops diminish medullary osmolality and thus the drive to re-absorb water in collecting duct
- Thiazides do not diminish medullary osmolality therefore water is more likely to be reabsorbed from collecting duct → causing hyponatraemia
How does cortisol affect ADH levels?
Suppresses ADH release, therefore adrenal insufficiency will cause high ADH → hyponatraemia
How does hypothyroidism affect ADH levels?
Increases ADH → low-sodium
In a psychiatric patient with hyponatraemia and low urine osmolality what condition should you consider? How would you treat?
Psychogenic polydipsia: need to drink more than 18L per day
fluid restriction
Why does a low intake of sodium cause hyponatraemia? What type of patients does this affect?
Urine has minimum osmolality needed to allow for excretion of free water, therefore some sodium must be excreted to allow water excretion.
Alcoholics: bear potomania, tea and toast diet

What can overly rapid correction of sodium cause? How slowly should you correct sodium?
Central pontine myelinolysis
Demyelination of central pontine axons causing loss of corticospinal and corticobulbar tracts → quadriplegia, similar to locked in syndrome
No more than 10 mmol/day
What are the two broad causes of hypernatraemia?
- Water loss from skin, lungs: more water loss than sodium
- Diabetes insipidus: loss of ADH activity
What are the two main symptoms of diabetes insipidus?
Polydipsia, polyuria
How do you diagnose diabetes insipidus? How can you differentiate between the two types of diabetes insipidus?
Fluid restrict for 8 hours: urine should be concentrated. If it remains dilute this indicates absent or ineffective ADH
- Administer vasopressin or desmopressin
- Should concentrate urine if kidneys work
- If no concentration → nephrogenic DI, Kidneys cannot respond to ADH
- If concentration → central DI, Loss of ADH release from pituitary

What are two treatments of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus? How does each work?
- Thiazide diuretics: cause mild volume depletion resulting in increase in proximal sodium and water resumption → less water to collecting duct resulting in paradoxical antidiuretic affect
- NSAIDs: inhibit renal synthesis of prostaglandins, which are ADH antagonists
Rapid correction of high sodium results in which condition?
Cerebral oedema, correct no more than 12 mmol per litre per day
What condition should you consider in a patient who is euvolaemic and has low sodium levels with concentrated urine?
SIADH