In hospitalized patients, mortality increased as serum sodium fell from 134 to 120 mEq/L but progressively decreased below 120 mEq/L, indicating underlying illness rather than hyponatremia drives mortality.
Observational (n=209,839)
No
Absolute Event Rate: 6.1% vs 2.3%
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Severe hyponatremia (<120 mEq/L) in hospitalized patients has a high mortality rate. We hypothesized that underlying diseases causing hyponatremia attribute to mortality rather than hyponatremia itself. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: The relationship between mortality and serum sodium (sNa) was examined in 45,693 patients admitted to a single community teaching hospital between January 1996 and December 2007. We conducted a comprehensive retrospective review of the medical records of 53 patients who died after developing sNa <120 mEq/L before or after admission and of 32 patients who survived after developing sNa <110 mEq/L. RESULTS: Mortality rates tended to increase as the sNa fell from 134 to 120 mEq/L, rising above 10% for patients with sNa of 120 to 124 mEq/L. However, below sNa of 120 mEq/L, the trend reversed, such that the mortality rate progressively decreased as sNa fell. More than two thirds of patients who died after sNa <120 mEq/L had at least two additional acute severe progressive illnesses, most commonly sepsis and multiorgan failure. Three deaths (5.6%) in 12 years could plausibly be related to adverse consequences of hyponatremia, and one (1.8% of the fatal cases and 0.15% of all patients with sNa <120 mEq/L) was from cerebral edema. Most patients who survived with sNa <110 mEq/L had medication-induced hyponatremia. Severe underlying illnesses were uncommon in this group. CONCLUSIONS: The nature of underlying illness rather than the severity of hyponatremia best explains mortality associated with hyponatremia. Neurologic complications from hyponatremia are uncommon among patients who die with hyponatremia.
Chawla et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Hyponatremia (n=209,839). Hyponatremia (sNa ≤135 mEq/L) vs. Normonatremia (sNa >135 mEq/L) was evaluated on In-hospital mortality. In hospitalized patients, mortality increased as serum sodium fell from 134 to 120 mEq/L but progressively decreased below 120 mEq/L, indicating underlying illness rather than hyponatremia drives mortality.
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