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Hypertonicity: Clinical entities, manifestations and treatment
- Source :
- World Journal of Nephrology
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Hypertonicity causes severe clinical manifestations and is associated with mortality and severe short-term and long-term neurological sequelae. The main clinical syndromes of hypertonicity are hypernatremia and hyperglycemia. Hypernatremia results from relative excess of body sodium over body water. Loss of water in excess of intake, gain of sodium salts in excess of losses or a combination of the two are the main mechanisms of hypernatremia. Hypernatremia can be hypervolemic, euvolemic or hypovolemic. The management of hypernatremia addresses both a quantitative replacement of water and, if present, sodium deficit, and correction of the underlying pathophysiologic process that led to hypernatremia. Hypertonicity in hyperglycemia has two components, solute gain secondary to glucose accumulation in the extracellular compartment and water loss through hyperglycemic osmotic diuresis in excess of the losses of sodium and potassium. Differentiating between these two components of hypertonicity has major therapeutic implications because the first component will be reversed simply by normalization of serum glucose concentration while the second component will require hypotonic fluid replacement. An estimate of the magnitude of the relative water deficit secondary to osmotic diuresis is obtained by the corrected sodium concentration, which represents a calculated value of the serum sodium concentration that would result from reduction of the serum glucose concentration to a normal level.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
medicine.medical_treatment
Sodium
Potassium
Body water
chemistry.chemical_element
030209 endocrinology & metabolism
Review
030204 cardiovascular system & hematology
03 medical and health sciences
Osmotic diuresis
0302 clinical medicine
Internal medicine
medicine
Hypertonicity
Water diuresis
Hypernatremia
business.industry
medicine.disease
Pathophysiology
Endocrinology
chemistry
Hyperglycemia
Tonicity
business
Fluid replacement
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 22206124
- Volume :
- 6
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- World journal of nephrology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c6b1c6234a42868687dae47430583b7e