Elsevier

Kidney International

Volume 39, Issue 6, June 1991, Pages 1274-1282
Kidney International

Clinical Investigation
Neurological and neuropathological sequelae of correction of chronic hyponatremia

https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.1991.161Get rights and content
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Neurological and neuropathological sequelae of correction of chronic hyponatremia. The effect of correction of chronic hyponatremia at different rates was studied in 91 rats maintained at a plasma [Na+] of 112 ± 1 mmol/liter for 19 ± 1 days. Hyponatremia was corrected into normal ranges (140 to 145 mmol/liter) using three different methods. Rats corrected by water restriction achieved normal plasma [Na+] by 2.1 ± 0.2 day and had a maximal (4 hr) correction rate of 1.0 ± 0.1 mmol/liter·hr; rats corrected by water diuresis achieved normal plasma [Na+] by 1.6 ± 0.1 day and had a maximal correction rate of 2.8 ± 0.2 mmol/liter·hr; rats corrected by hypertonic saline infusion achieved normal plasma [Na+] by 5.4 ± 0.3 hr and had a maximal correction rate of 5.7 ± 0.4 mmol/liter · hr. A fourth control group was not corrected. No demyelinative lesions were found in the brains from the uncorrected rats, whereas the occurrence of such lesions in the brains of the corrected rats was highly correlated with the maximal rate of increase in plasma [Na+] (r = 0.68, P < 0.001), and to a lesser degree with the magnitude of the increase in plasma [Na+] over the first 24 hours of correction (r = 0.41, P < 0.001). Brain myelinolysis was first observed in animals whose maximal (4 hr) rate of correction exceeded 1.75 mmol/liter·hr, and the incidence of demyelination increased progressively in rats with more rapid rates of correction. Similarly, myelinolysis was first observed in rats whose magnitude of correction at 24 hours exceeded 16 mmol/liter and also increased in rats with larger 24 hour magnitudes of correction. Analysis of the incidence of myelinolysis using both of these correction parameters together indicated that demyelination did not occur in rats whose maximal rate of increase in plasma [Na+] did not exceed 4 mmol/liter · hr and whose absolute increase in plasma [Na+] did not exceed 25 mmol/liter in the first 24 hours; for all rats who exceeded either one of these two limits the incidence of demyelinative lesions was 64%. Our results suggest that the maximal rate as well as the magnitude of correction of plasma [Na+] represent significant risk factors for the development of brain myelinolysis after correction of experimental hypoosmolality in chronically hyponatremic rats.

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