A Contemporary Narrative Review of Sodium Homeostasis Mechanisms, Dysnatraemia, and the Clinical Relevance in Adult Critical Illness
Vignesh Raman, Mahesh Ramanan, Felicity Edwards, Kevin B. Laupland

TL;DR
This review explores how sodium balance issues affect critically ill patients and highlights the importance of proper diagnosis and treatment.
Contribution
The paper provides a contemporary narrative review of sodium homeostasis and dysnatraemia in ICU settings, emphasizing clinical relevance.
Findings
Dysnatraemias are common in ICU patients and linked to higher mortality and morbidity.
Understanding sodium homeostasis is crucial for effective diagnosis and treatment in critical care.
Current literature lacks sufficient guidance on managing deranged sodium physiology in ICU settings.
Abstract
Amongst critically ill patients managed in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting, disorders of sodium and water balance, or dysnatraemias, are commonly encountered either at time of admission or during ICU stay. There is extensive literature associating both extremities of incident dysnatraemia, hyponatraemia, and hypernatremia, with higher mortality and morbidity amongst a range of ICU disease populations. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding of sodium homeostasis mechanisms, effects of deranged sodium physiology, comprehensive diagnostic workup, and avoidance of suboptimal management are paramount to the critical care clinician. This narrative review incorporated a PubMed search to summarise contemporary literature perspectives of (a) sodium homeostasis mechanisms, (b) descriptions of dysnatraemia, (c) ICU-specific challenges to dysnatraemia diagnosis, (d) associated clinical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrolyte and hormonal disorders · Ion Transport and Channel Regulation · Potassium and Related Disorders
