Hyponatremia Management Medical Slides
Generate publication-quality hyponatremia management lecture slides in 30 seconds. AI-powered content structured for clinical education.
Generate Hyponatremia Management DeckWhy teach Hyponatremia Management?
Hyponatremia (sodium <135 mEq/L) is the most common electrolyte abnormality, present in up to 30% of hospitalized patients. Severe hyponatremia (<120 mEq/L) with neurological symptoms carries mortality up to 50% without treatment. The 2014 European and 2013 American expert panel guidelines provide frameworks for diagnosis and management, with the critical balance between correcting symptomatic hyponatremia and avoiding osmotic demyelination syndrome (ODS) from overly rapid correction.
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Hyponatremia Management Presentation FAQ
How should the hyponatremia diagnostic algorithm be presented?
Present the stepwise approach: Step 1 — Serum osmolality: low (<280) = true hypotonic hyponatremia; normal (280-295) = pseudohyponatremia (lipids, proteins); high (>295) = translocational (hyperglycemia — correct sodium by 1.6-2.4 mEq/L per 100 mg/dL glucose above 100). Step 2 — Volume status assessment (clinical ± FENa, BUN/Cr). Step 3 — Urine osmolality: <100 = primary polydipsia or low solute intake; >100 = ADH-mediated. Step 4 — Urine sodium: <30 = volume depletion or low effective arterial volume; >30 = SIADH, adrenal insufficiency, hypothyroidism, diuretics.
What emergency hypertonic saline protocol should be taught?
Present the 2014 European guideline protocol for severe symptomatic hyponatremia (seizures, obtundation): 3% NaCl 100-150 mL IV bolus over 10-20 minutes, may repeat 1-2 times at 10-minute intervals targeting 4-6 mEq/L increase in first 1-2 hours (sufficient to reduce cerebral edema and stop seizures). Then SLOW correction to stay within 8 mEq/L per 24 hours and 18 mEq/L per 48 hours (some experts recommend 6 mEq/L per 24 hours for high-risk patients). Check sodium every 2-4 hours. High ODS risk: Na <105, chronic (>48 hrs), alcoholism, liver disease, malnutrition, hypokalemia.
How should DDAVP rescue for overcorrection be presented?
Present the proactive DDAVP strategy: if sodium correction approaching or exceeding 8 mEq/L in 24 hours, administer DDAVP 1-2 mcg IV every 6-8 hours to halt free water excretion (induces therapeutic SIADH). Simultaneously administer D5W IV to re-lower sodium to the target range. The proactive approach (giving DDAVP prophylactically at the time of initial correction in high-risk patients) is increasingly favored — Sood 2013 showed DDAVP clamp protocol keeps correction within safe limits in >95% of patients. Key teaching point: the most common overcorrection scenario is volume-depleted patient given IV saline who then appropriately suppresses ADH and undergoes rapid aquaresis.
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