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A mathematical approach to severe hyponatremia and hypernatremia in renal replacement therapies

Journal

SEMINARS IN DIALYSIS
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 42-50

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/sdi.12918

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This article addresses the challenging issue of severe dysnatremias in patients undergoing renal replacement therapy, providing simple formulas and recommendations for clinicians to determine the appropriate solution rates at the bedside.
Severe dysnatremias are perplexing problems in patients undergoing renal replacement therapy on a chronic or acute basis. The ability to manipulate sodium concentration in the dialysate or replacement solutions is limited. Compounding dialysate or replacement fluids to alter sodium concentration could result in errors. Rapid correction of hyponatremia or hypernatremia due to equilibrium with dialysate or replacement solutions could lead to osmotic demyelination syndrome or cerebral edema respectively. Continuous renal replacement therapy is the preferred dialysis modality in patients with severe dysnatremias. In this article, we present simple formulas to determine the rate of hypotonic or hypertonic solutions needed to mitigate rapid correction of dysnatremias. These formulas can be used readily by the clinician at bedside.

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