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Hyponatremia and malnutrition: a comprehensive review

Germán Báez, M Chirio, Pedro Pisula, Enrique Seminario, Natalia Carasa, Romina Philippi, Gustavo Aroca, Carlos G. Musso

2023Irish Journal of Medical Science (1971 -)16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hyponatremia (serum sodium lower than 135 mmol/L) is the most frequent electrolyte alteration diagnosed in medical practice. It has deleterious clinical effects, being an independent predictor of mortality. Malnutrition encompasses pathological states caused by both nutrients excess and deficiency, being frequently documented in chronic kidney disease patients. In addition, chronic hyponatremia promotes adiposity loss and sarcopenia, while malnutrition can induce hyponatremia. This pathological interaction is mediated by four main mechanisms: altered electrolyte body composition (low sodium, low potassium, low phosphorus, or high-water body content), systemic inflammation (cytokines increase), hormonal mechanisms (renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system activation, vasopressin release), and anorexia (primary or secondary). CONCLUSION: Malnutrition can induce hyponatremia through hydro-electrolytic, hormonal, inflammatory, or nutritional behavior changes; while hyponatremia per se can induce malnutrition, so there is a pathophysiological feedback between both conditions.

Topics & Concepts

HyponatremiaMedicineMalnutritionElectrolyte DisorderInternal medicineEndocrinologyAnorexiaVasopressinPathologicalHormoneElectrolyte and hormonal disordersSodium Intake and HealthPotassium and Related Disorders
Hyponatremia and malnutrition: a comprehensive review | Litcius