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CMAJ • February 3, 2004; 170 (3)
© 2004 Canadian Medical Association or its licensors


Review
Synthèse

Salt and water: a simple approach to hyponatremia

Karen E. Yeates, Michael Singer and A. Ross Morton

From the Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ont. (all authors)

Correspondence to: Dr. Karen E. Yeates, University Health Network, 620 University Ave., Toronto, ON M5G 2C1

Abstract

HYPONATREMIA IS COMMON IN BOTH INPATIENTS and outpatients. Medications are often the cause of acute or chronic hyponatremia. Measuring the serum osmolality, urine sodium concentration and urine osmolality will help differentiate among the possible causes. Hyponatremia in the physical states of extracellular fluid (ECF) volume contraction and expansion can be easy to diagnose but often proves difficult to manage. In patients with these states or with normal or near-normal ECF volume, the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone is a diagnosis of exclusion, requiring a thorough search for all other possible causes. Hyponatremia should be corrected at a rate similar to that at which it developed. When symptoms are mild, hyponatremia should be managed conservatively, with therapy aimed at removing the offending cause. When symptoms are severe, therapy should be aimed at more aggressive correction of the serum sodium concentration, typically with intravenous therapy in the inpatient setting.





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