Case report: Acute severe hyponatremia-induced seizures in a newborn: a community-acquired case and literature review
Haiting Li, Xiyang Chen, Linlin Chen, Jie Li, Xixi Liu, Caie Chen, Dengpan Xie, Junhui Yuan, Enfu Tao

TL;DR
A newborn with severe hyponatremia developed seizures and was successfully treated with rapid electrolyte correction and aEEG monitoring.
Contribution
This case report highlights the use of aEEG monitoring and rapid hypertonic saline treatment in managing severe neonatal hyponatremia-induced seizures.
Findings
The neonate's seizures resolved after rapid correction of hyponatremia with hypertonic saline and aEEG monitoring.
The child showed no neurological deficits at 16 months post-treatment.
aEEG monitoring detected seizure activity and guided treatment adjustments.
Abstract
Severe neonatal hyponatremia represents a critical electrolyte imbalance with potentially severe neurological outcomes, a condition rarely documented in community-acquired, full-term newborns. This report underscores a unique case of a 23-day-old, previously healthy, full-term male neonate experiencing severe hyponatremia that precipitated seizures, underscoring the urgency of prompt recognition and intervention. The neonate presented with symptoms including vomiting, groaning, chills, fixed staring, and limb tremors. Critical findings upon admission encompassed hypothermia, hypotension, tachycardia, and tachypnea accompanied by significant weight loss. The clinical presentation was marked by dehydration, lethargy, weak crying, a fixed gaze, irregular breathing, and coarse lung sounds, yet a distended abdomen, hypertonic limb movements, and recurrent seizures were observed. Immediate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrolyte and hormonal disorders · Ion Transport and Channel Regulation · Renal function and acid-base balance
