Postoperative hyponatremia. A prospective study
- 1 February 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 146 (2) , 333-336
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.146.2.333
Abstract
In the present study, we found that at least 4.4% of 1,088 prospectively studied patients developed postoperative hyponatremia (plasma sodium concentration < 130 mEq/L). Most patients (42%) were normovolemic. Edematous states (21%), hyperglycemia (21%), volume depletion (8%), and renal failure (8%), however, were also common settings of postoperative hyponatremia. Plasma arginine vasopressin was present in all patients in whom it was measured and 94% of the patients were receiving hypotonic fluid at the time of development of hyponatremia. Hyponatremia was not associated with significant neurologic deterioration in the 48 postoperative patients in the present study. In eight patients, however, the positive water balance that resulted in hyponatremia was associated with development of pulmonary vascular congestion. We conclude that hyponatremia commonly occurs following all types of surgical procedures and is due to hypotonic fluid administration in the presence of nonosmotic secretion of arginine vasopressin.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hyponatremia: A Prospective Analysis of Its Epidemiology and the Pathogenetic Role of VasopressinAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1985
- Role of Vasopressin in Abnormal Water Excretion in Cirrhotic PatientsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1982
- Hyponatremia after choledochostomy and T tube drainageThe American Journal of Surgery, 1966
- Postoperative Hyponatremia with the Inappropriate Release of Antidiuretic HormoneAnesthesiology, 1966