1 / 34

Hypernatremia and Fluid Resuscitation

Hypernatremia and Fluid Resuscitation. Staci Smith, DO. Hypernatremia. serum sodium level >145 mEq/L hypertonic by definition usually due to loss of hypotonic fluid occasionally infusion of hypertonic fluid due to too little water, too much salt, or a combination

ita
Download Presentation

Hypernatremia and Fluid Resuscitation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hypernatremia and Fluid Resuscitation Staci Smith, DO

  2. Hypernatremia • serum sodium level >145 mEq/L • hypertonic by definition • usually due to loss of hypotonic fluid • occasionally infusion of hypertonic fluid • due to too little water, too much salt, or a combination • typically due to water deficit plus restricted access to free water • approximately 1-4% of hospitalized patients • tends to be at the extremes of age

  3. Mortality Eye Opener • mortality rate across all age groups is approximately 45%. • mortality rate in the geriatric age group is as high as 79%

  4. Hypernatremia • sodium levels are tightly controlled • by regulation of urine concentration • production and regulation of the thirst response • normally water intake and losses are matched • to maintain salt homeostasis, the kidneys adjust urine concentration to match salt intake and loss • kidneys' normal response • is excretion of a minimal amount of maximally concentrated urine

  5. Hypernatremia • normal plasma osmolality (Posm ) • 275 to 290 mosmol/kg • Na is the primary determinant of serum osmolarity • number of solute particles in the solution • mechanisms to return the Posm to normal • sensed by receptor cells in the hypothalamus • affect water intake via thirst • water excretion via ADH • increases water reabsorption in the collecting tubules

  6. ADH

  7. ADH Mechanism of Action

  8. Protection Mechanism • major protection against the development of hypernatremia • is increased water intake • initial rise in the plasma sodium concentration stimulates thirst • via the hypothalamic osmoreceptors

  9. Hypernatremia • usually occurs in infants or adults • particularly the elderly • impaired mental status • may have an intact thirst mechanism but are unable to ask for water • increasing age is also associated with diminished osmotic stimulation of thirst • unknown mechanism

  10. Hypernatremia • cells become dehydrated • sodium acts to extract water from the cells • primarily an extracellular ion • is actively pumped out of most cells • dehydrated cells shrink from water extraction • effects seen principally in the CNS

  11. Protective Mechanism • cells respond to combat this shrinkage • by transporting electrolytes across the cell membrane • altering rest potentials of electrically active membranes • intracellular organic solutes • generated in an effort to restore cell volume and avoid structural damage

  12. Risk factors for hypernatremia • Age older than 65 years • Mental or physical disability • Hospitalization (intubation, impaired cognitive function) • Residence in nursing home • Inadequate nursing care • Urine concentrating defect (diabetes insipidus) • Solute diuresis (diabetes mellitus) • Diuretic therapy

  13. Assessment • Two important questions: • What is the patient's volume status? • Is the problem acute or chronic? • Does the patient complain of polyuria or polydipsia ? • Central vs Nephrogenic DI • often crave ice-cold water

  14. lethargy general weakness irritability weight loss diarrhea twitching seizures coma orthostatic hypotension tachycardia oliguria prerenal :High BUN-to-creatinine ratio dry axillae/ dry MMM hyperthermia poor skin turgor nystagmus myoclonic jerks Clinical Manifestations

  15. Work-up : Sodium levels • more than 170 mEq/L usually indicates long-term salt ingestion • 50-170 mEq/L usually indicates dehydration • chronicity typically has fewer neurologic symptoms

  16. Lab Work-up : Sodium levels • order urine osmolality and sodium levels • glucose level to ensure that osmotic diuresis has not occurred • CT or MRI head • water deprivation test • ADH stimulation

  17. Hypernatremia Work -Up • Head CT scan or MRI is suggested in all patients • Traction on dural bridging veins and sinuses • Leads to intracranial hemorrhage • most often in the subdural space

  18. Intracranial Hemorrhage

  19. Intracranial Hemorrhage

  20. Treatment • Replace free water deficit • IVF • TPN / tube feeds • Rapid correction of extracellular hypertonicity • passive movement of water molecules into the relatively hypertonic intracellular space • causes cellular swelling, damage and ultimate death

  21. Treatment • First, estimate TBW (Total Body Water) • TBW= .60 x IBW x 0.85 if female & 0.85 if elderly • IBW for women= 100 lbs for the first 5 feet and 5lbs for each additional inch • IBW men= 110 lbs for the first 5 feet and 5 lbs for each additional inch • Our pt IBW= 120 (5 ft , 4’’) • TBW= 52.0 • = .60 x 120 x 0.85. 0.85

  22. General Treatment • Next, calculate the free water deficit • Free water deficit= TBW x (serum Na -140/140) • Our Pt’s FWD= 52 x (154-140/140) • = 52 x 0.1 • = 5.2 L free water deficit

  23. Avoiding Complications: Cerebral Edema • Acute hypernatremia • occurring in a period of less than 48 hours • can be corrected rapidly (1-2 mmol/L/h) • Chronic hypernatremia • rate not to exceed 0.5 mmol/L/h or a total of 10 mmol/d • Change in conc of Na per 1L of infusate = conc of Na in serum- conc of Na in infusate / TBW + 1

  24. Common Na Contents

  25. Hypervolemic Hypernatremia • Hypertonic saline • Sodium bicarbonate administration • Accidental salt ingestion • Mineralocorticoid excess (Cushing’s syndrome) • ectopic ACTH • small cell lung ca, carcinoid, pheo, MTC (MEN II) • pituitary adenoma • pituitary hyperplasia • adrenal tumor • Dx: Dexamethasone suppression test

  26. Hypervolemic Hypernatremia • Treatment • D5 W plus loop diuretic such as Lasix • may require dialysis for correction

  27. Hypovolemia Hypernatremia • water deficit >sodium deficit • Extrarenal losses • diarrhea, vomiting, fistulas, significant burns • Urine Na less than 20 and U Osm >600 • Renal losses • urine Na >20 with U Osm 300-600 • osmotic diuretics, diuretics, postobstructive diuresis, intrinsic renal disease • DM / DKA • increased solute clearance per nephron, increasing free water loss

  28. Euvolemic Hypernatremia • Diabetes Insipidus • Typically mild hypernatremia with severe polyuria • Central DI = ADH deficiency • Sx, hemorrhage, infxn, ca/tumor, trauma, anorexics, hypoxia, granulomatous dz (Wegener’s, sarcoidosis, TB), Sheehan’s • U Osm less than 300 • Tx is DDAVP

  29. Nephrogenic DI = ADH resistance Congenital Meds – Lithium, ampho B, demeclocycline,foscarnet Obstructive uropathy Hypercalcemia, severe hypokalemia Chronic tubulointerstitial diseases - Analgesic abuse nephropathy, polycystic kidney disease, medullary cystic disease Pregnancy Sarcoidosis Sjogren’s synd Sickle Cell Anemia U osm 300-600 Tx: salt restriction plus thiazide Tx underlying cause Diabetes Insipidus: Euvolemic Hypernatremia

  30. Euvolemic Hypernatremia • Seizures where osmoles are generated that cause water shifts • transient increase in Na • Increased insensible losses (hyperventilation)

  31. Hypovolemia Hypernatremia • Combo of volume deficit plus hypernatremia • intravascular volume should be restored with isotonic sodium chloride (.9 NS) beforefree water administration

  32. Summary • Dehydration is NOT synonomous with hypovolemia • Hypernatremia due to water loss is called dehydration. • Hypovolemia is where both salt and water are lost. • Two important questions: • What is the patient's volume status? • Is the problem acute or chronic? • Does the patient complain of polyuria or polydipsia ?

  33. Summary • Divide causes of hypernatremia into hyper, hypo, and euvolemic. • Estimate TBW (Total Body Water) • TBW= .60 x IBW x 0.85 if female & 0.85 if elderly • Free water deficit= TBW x (serum Na -140/140) • Check electrolytes frequently not to replace Na more than 0.5 mmol/L/h or a total of 10 mmol/d • Avoid cerebral edema

  34. References • Harrison’s Internal Medicine • E-medicine • http://www.mdcalc.com/bicarbdeficit.php

More Related