Original Article
Spinal Cord (2007) 45, 563–568; doi:10.1038/sj.sc.3101984; published online 10 October 2006
Salt wasting, hypotension, polydipsia, and hyponatremia and the level of spinal cord injury
J H Frisbie1
1Spinal Cord Injury Service (128), Boston Healthcare Center, West Roxbury, MA, USA
Correspondence: JH Frisbie, Spinal Cord Injury Service (128), Boston Healthcare Center, 1400 VFW Parkway, West Roxbury, MA 2132, USA
Abstract
Study Design:
Case control.
Objective:
To test the reported correlation of hypotension, polydipsia, and hyponatremia with higher levels of spinal cord injury (SCI).
Setting:
A Veterans Administration Hospital, USA.
Methods:
The records of men who were paralyzed owing to trauma at any spinal cord level with motor complete lesions (ASIA A or B) and who received an annual physical and laboratory examination were reviewed for age, duration of paralysis, level of paralysis, blood pressure (BP), serum sodium, and 24 h urinary volume, creatinine, and sodium. Creatinine clearance and fractional excretion of sodium (FcNa) were calculated. Spearman rank-order correlations (r s) were carried out.
Results:
Patients were aged 25 to 88 years, median 56 years, paralyzed 2–61 years, median 26 years, with levels of paralysis ranging from C2 to L4, median T4, n=111. From lower to higher levels of paralysis FcNa increased (0.4–7.3%), mean BP diminished (132–66 mmHg), urine volume increased (600–5400 ml), and serum sodium was reduced (148–129 mEq/l) – r s=0.29, 0.49, -0.22, and 0.23, respectively. Increasing 24 h urinary volumes correlated with lower serum sodium concentrations but higher creatinine clearance, r s=-0.28, 0.24. Increasing 24 h urinary sodium improved creatinine clearance, r s=0.37. P-values ranged from <0.05 to <0.001.
Conclusion:
Higher levels of SCI correlate with reduced sodium conservation, hypotension, polydipsia, and hyponatremia. Greater water intake raises creatinine clearance but lowers serum sodium. Greater salt intake increases creatinine clearance.
Keywords:
spinal cord injury, hypotension, thirst, hyponatremia, salt wasting
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