Renal · Water and Osmolality

Sodium and Osmolality Disorders

Sodium is a water problem, not a salt problem. The board pivot: how fast did it happen, and which way is water moving in the brain.

Board-Style Opener · Read Every Word
A 62-year-old woman is brought to the emergency department by her daughter because of confusion and repeated vomiting since this morning, followed by a generalized tonic-clonic seizure in triage. She was started on a thiazide diuretic five days ago for hypertension and has been drinking large amounts of water and iced tea since. On examination she is lethargic and disoriented, with moist mucous membranes, no focal deficit, and no peripheral edema. Temperature is 37.0 C, blood pressure 142/86 mm Hg, heart rate 95/min. Laboratory studies show serum sodium 115 mEq/L (135 to 145), serum osmolality 236 mOsm/kg (275 to 295), and urine osmolality 430 mOsm/kg. A noncontrast head CT shows effaced sulci without hemorrhage.
Which of the following best explains her seizure and neurologic findings?
AWater shifting into brain cells, producing cerebral edema
BOsmotic demyelination of the central pons
CHypertonic plasma drawing water out of neurons
DSpontaneous intracranial hemorrhage from hypertension
EHyperammonemia from hepatic encephalopathy
From the Attending

Two words sound alike and ruin students: edema and demyelination. They are opposite directions of water. Sodium dropped in five days. That is fast. Fast and low means plasma is dilute, so water rushes INTO neurons and the brain swells. Swelling seizes. Swelling herniates.

Demyelination is the mirror image: it comes from fixing a slow, chronic low too fast, pulling water back OUT. She has not been corrected yet. There is nothing to over-correct. The seizure is edema. Do not talk yourself out of the right answer.

Water Moves Which Way

One neuron. Four moments in time. Tap each phase and watch the cell swell, adapt, then shrink. This is the entire acute-versus-chronic story in one picture.

PLASMA · EXTRACELLULAR FLUID NEURON MYELIN SHEATH AXON Na+ (sodium)
From the Attending

The brain is not passive. Give it 48 hours and it pumps its own osmolytes out to stop the swelling. Now the cell is normal size but running low on solute. That is the trap waiting to spring.

Raise the sodium faster than the brain can pull those osmolytes back in, and water leaves the cell, the myelin tears, and you get a locked-in patient days later. Slow is safe. Roughly 6 to 8 a day. Every time.

Acute vs Chronic vs Demyelination

Same low sodium number, three different emergencies. The only variable that matters is time. Tap each tab.

Acute
Chronic
Demyelination
Acute Hyponatremia · Water Floods In
Noncontrast head CT showing diffuse cerebral edema with effaced sulci and loss of grey-white differentiation
Head CT · diffuse cerebral edema, effaced sulci · tap to expand
Timeframe
Under 48 hours. The brain has had no time to adapt.
Water move
Plasma is suddenly hypotonic, so water rushes into neurons. The cell swells.
Picture
Headache, nausea, vomiting, confusion, seizures, and risk of brainstem herniation.
Treat
3% hypertonic saline. A 4 to 6 mEq/L rise quickly reverses swelling and stops seizures.
Board trap
Do not slow-walk a seizing patient. Acute symptomatic low sodium is the one time you push sodium up fast.
Chronic Hyponatremia · The Brain Adapted
Timeframe
Over 48 hours, often weeks. SIADH, thiazides, heart failure, cirrhosis.
Water move
Neurons exported organic osmolytes, so cell volume is near normal. The brain looks calm.
Picture
Often mild: fatigue, gait unsteadiness, falls, poor concentration. The danger is now in the correction, not the number.
Treat
Fix the cause and raise sodium slowly: no more than about 6 to 8 mEq/L in 24 hours.
Board trap
A calm patient with sodium of 110 is chronic until proven otherwise. The osmolyte loss is exactly why fast correction is dangerous.
Osmotic Demyelination · Corrected Too Fast
Axial brain MRI showing symmetric central pontine high signal of osmotic demyelination
Brain MRI · central pontine demyelination · tap to expand
Cause
Raising sodium faster than the brain can re-accumulate osmolytes in a chronic low. Water leaves the cell.
Water move
Plasma becomes relatively hypertonic, water exits neurons, and myelin in the central pons is stripped.
Picture
A classic biphasic course: the patient improves, then 2 to 6 days later develops dysarthria, dysphagia, spastic quadriparesis, and a locked-in state.
Highest risk
Alcohol use, malnutrition, liver disease, hypokalemia, and starting sodium very low.
Board trap
If correction overshoots, re-lower sodium with free water or desmopressin. Prevention beats rescue.