Hypernatremia
Anesthetic relevance

Moderate

Anesthetic management

If severe, delay elective surgery
Correct slowly (≤0.5 mEq/hr)

Specialty

Nephrology, neurology

Signs and symptoms

Depending on severity: Restlessness
Irritability
Ataxia
Hyperreflexia
Seizure
Coma
Death
May also have symptoms related to the underlying cause of hypernatremia (e.g. thirst, vomiting, diarrhea, polyuria)

Diagnosis

Serum sodium Serum osmolality, urine sodium and osmolality (to determine etiology)

Treatment

Replace free water deficit
Correct slowly (≤0.5 mEq/hr)

Article quality
Editor rating
Comprehensive
User likes
1

Hypernatremia is an abnormally high concentration of sodium in the blood, and can occur on an acute or chronic basis. Hypernatremia leads to a hyperosmolar state, and serum osmolarity often correlates with patient symptoms. Hypernatremia may also be intentionally induced to manage ICP.

Anesthetic implications

Preoperative optimization

  • Consider postponing elective cases until treated/stable
  • Perform focused neuro exam

Intraoperative management

  • Frequent sodium rechecks to ensure appropriate correction rate

Related surgical procedures

  • Hypernatremia may be intentionally induced to manage critical ICP before performing a craniotomy

Pathophysiology

  • Underlying pathophysiology varies depending on etiology (see Diagnosis section), but typically relates to a total body free water deficit
  • If severe/acute can lead to
    • Brain shrinkage and myelinolysis
    • Traction of cerebral vessels, which can cause
      • Hemorrhage
      • Venous sinus thrombosis
      • Infarction

Signs and symptoms

Serum osmolality Symptoms[1]
350-375 Restlessness, irritability
376-400 Tremulousness, ataxia
400-430 Hyperreflexia, twitching, spasticity
>430 Seizure, coma, death

Diagnosis

  • Differential diagnosis guided by comparison of serum and urine osmolality
  • If urine osmolality appropriate (700-800 mOsm/kg), differential includes:
    • Water loss
      • Vomiting
      • Diarrhea
      • Sweating
    • Sodium overload
      • Increased sodium intake
      • Sodium bicarbonate administration
      • Renal sodium retention
    • Lack of thirst (rare)
  • If urine osmolality low (<300 mOsm/kg), consider diabetes insipidus:
    • Central diabetes insipidus (desmopressin challenge/therapy improves urine concentration)
      • Head trauma
      • CVA
      • Tumor
    • Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus

Treatment

  • If water loss or sodium overload, replace free water deficit
    • Typically use 1/2 NS
    • Correct slowly (≤0.5 mEq/hr)
    • Frequently recheck sodium to ensure correction rate
    • If corrected too quickly, risk of cerebral edema
  • If central DI, treat with desmopressin


Free water deficit

References

  1. "Hypernatremia - WikEM". wikem.org. Retrieved 2022-03-30.