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Challenges of Managing and Diagnosing Reset Osmostat vs SIADH in a Patient With Personal and Family History of Chronic Hyponatremia

Background: Distinguishing between a reset osmostat and SIADH in a hyponatremic patient can prove to be challenging in certain circumstances. Reset osmostat is an uncommon and under recognized cause of hyponatremia. Thus, it is important to recognize it as it does not require any treatment. Clinical...

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Autores principales: Syed, Hasan, Attele, Praveen, Parimi, Joseph Theressa Nehu, Naha, Sowjanya, Gusov, Timur, Gundluru, Rajani, Liu, John Chen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090548/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1176
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author Syed, Hasan
Attele, Praveen
Parimi, Joseph Theressa Nehu
Naha, Sowjanya
Gusov, Timur
Gundluru, Rajani
Liu, John Chen
author_facet Syed, Hasan
Attele, Praveen
Parimi, Joseph Theressa Nehu
Naha, Sowjanya
Gusov, Timur
Gundluru, Rajani
Liu, John Chen
author_sort Syed, Hasan
collection PubMed
description Background: Distinguishing between a reset osmostat and SIADH in a hyponatremic patient can prove to be challenging in certain circumstances. Reset osmostat is an uncommon and under recognized cause of hyponatremia. Thus, it is important to recognize it as it does not require any treatment. Clinical Case: A 48 year old male with history of chronic hyponatremia of unknown cause, fatty liver, hypertension, was in the hospital post operatively after resection of a meningioma along dura. Endocrine was consulted for management of his chronic hyponatremia. Had chronic hyponatremia for over 20 years and was always asymptomatic. Normally drank 6-7 L of water at home, mostly at night. Also found to have a spinal compression fracture of unknown cause. Both his father and brother had chronic hyponatremia of unknown cause as well, suggesting possible familial component. His baseline sodium levels were 129-133 mmol/L. In the hospital, serum sodium levels decreased to the 120s. TSH was 0.307mcunit/mL (0.27-4.2). Was also placed on 1.5 L fluid restriction. Urine osmolality was 900 mOsm/kg (500-800) with sodium of 123 mmol/L (136-145), consistent with SIADH. A rare inherited disorder, nephrogenic SIADH (NSIADH), was considered. However, it has an X-linked inheritance pattern. Fluid restriction was removed, then did fluid load with 2L of water and obtained urine sodium, serum sodium, urine osmolality, serum osmolality, Copeptin (pro-AVP) before fluid load and 1 hour after fluid load. Serum sodium level went from 127mmol/L before to 125 mmol/L after. Urine osmolality improved from 984 mOsm/kg prior to 575 mOsm/kg after. Urine sodium went from 183 mmol/L prior to 91 mmol/L after. Serum osmolality went from 278 mOsm/kg (270-310) to 268 mOsm/kg after. His co-peptin pro-AVP levels were 16.4 pmol/L (ref. <13.1). They are found to be low in NSIADH. It was decided that his chronic hyponatremia was likely due to reset osmostat. After discharge and follow up, his serum sodium was rechecked and was 128 mmol/L. It would have been challenging, but useful, to try a vaptan for diagnostic purposes and possibly to increase serum sodium. However, there are complications from overcorrection. Since patient had long standing asymptomatic chronic hyponatremia with family history, it was decided not to pursue aggressive measures just to “normalize” serum sodium. Otherwise, it would have been an example of treating the numbers and not the patient. Conclusions: Case demonstrates the importance of keeping the patient, their symptoms, and clinical picture in mind, and to not just follow numbers, as difficult as it may be, especially when managing conditions in which diagnosis may be uncertain or unclear. Sometimes no intervention is needed at all, however tempting it may be to do one, it is important to keep the former option in mind. An asymptomatic patient with longstanding chronic hyponatremia due to reset osmostat is an example of that.
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spelling pubmed-80905482021-05-05 Challenges of Managing and Diagnosing Reset Osmostat vs SIADH in a Patient With Personal and Family History of Chronic Hyponatremia Syed, Hasan Attele, Praveen Parimi, Joseph Theressa Nehu Naha, Sowjanya Gusov, Timur Gundluru, Rajani Liu, John Chen J Endocr Soc Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary Background: Distinguishing between a reset osmostat and SIADH in a hyponatremic patient can prove to be challenging in certain circumstances. Reset osmostat is an uncommon and under recognized cause of hyponatremia. Thus, it is important to recognize it as it does not require any treatment. Clinical Case: A 48 year old male with history of chronic hyponatremia of unknown cause, fatty liver, hypertension, was in the hospital post operatively after resection of a meningioma along dura. Endocrine was consulted for management of his chronic hyponatremia. Had chronic hyponatremia for over 20 years and was always asymptomatic. Normally drank 6-7 L of water at home, mostly at night. Also found to have a spinal compression fracture of unknown cause. Both his father and brother had chronic hyponatremia of unknown cause as well, suggesting possible familial component. His baseline sodium levels were 129-133 mmol/L. In the hospital, serum sodium levels decreased to the 120s. TSH was 0.307mcunit/mL (0.27-4.2). Was also placed on 1.5 L fluid restriction. Urine osmolality was 900 mOsm/kg (500-800) with sodium of 123 mmol/L (136-145), consistent with SIADH. A rare inherited disorder, nephrogenic SIADH (NSIADH), was considered. However, it has an X-linked inheritance pattern. Fluid restriction was removed, then did fluid load with 2L of water and obtained urine sodium, serum sodium, urine osmolality, serum osmolality, Copeptin (pro-AVP) before fluid load and 1 hour after fluid load. Serum sodium level went from 127mmol/L before to 125 mmol/L after. Urine osmolality improved from 984 mOsm/kg prior to 575 mOsm/kg after. Urine sodium went from 183 mmol/L prior to 91 mmol/L after. Serum osmolality went from 278 mOsm/kg (270-310) to 268 mOsm/kg after. His co-peptin pro-AVP levels were 16.4 pmol/L (ref. <13.1). They are found to be low in NSIADH. It was decided that his chronic hyponatremia was likely due to reset osmostat. After discharge and follow up, his serum sodium was rechecked and was 128 mmol/L. It would have been challenging, but useful, to try a vaptan for diagnostic purposes and possibly to increase serum sodium. However, there are complications from overcorrection. Since patient had long standing asymptomatic chronic hyponatremia with family history, it was decided not to pursue aggressive measures just to “normalize” serum sodium. Otherwise, it would have been an example of treating the numbers and not the patient. Conclusions: Case demonstrates the importance of keeping the patient, their symptoms, and clinical picture in mind, and to not just follow numbers, as difficult as it may be, especially when managing conditions in which diagnosis may be uncertain or unclear. Sometimes no intervention is needed at all, however tempting it may be to do one, it is important to keep the former option in mind. An asymptomatic patient with longstanding chronic hyponatremia due to reset osmostat is an example of that. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8090548/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1176 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
Syed, Hasan
Attele, Praveen
Parimi, Joseph Theressa Nehu
Naha, Sowjanya
Gusov, Timur
Gundluru, Rajani
Liu, John Chen
Challenges of Managing and Diagnosing Reset Osmostat vs SIADH in a Patient With Personal and Family History of Chronic Hyponatremia
title Challenges of Managing and Diagnosing Reset Osmostat vs SIADH in a Patient With Personal and Family History of Chronic Hyponatremia
title_full Challenges of Managing and Diagnosing Reset Osmostat vs SIADH in a Patient With Personal and Family History of Chronic Hyponatremia
title_fullStr Challenges of Managing and Diagnosing Reset Osmostat vs SIADH in a Patient With Personal and Family History of Chronic Hyponatremia
title_full_unstemmed Challenges of Managing and Diagnosing Reset Osmostat vs SIADH in a Patient With Personal and Family History of Chronic Hyponatremia
title_short Challenges of Managing and Diagnosing Reset Osmostat vs SIADH in a Patient With Personal and Family History of Chronic Hyponatremia
title_sort challenges of managing and diagnosing reset osmostat vs siadh in a patient with personal and family history of chronic hyponatremia
topic Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090548/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1176
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