神经外科患者低钠血症的诊断与治疗

Martín Cuesta, Mark J. Hannon, Christopher J. Thompson
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摘要

低钠血症是神经外科患者最常见的电解质失衡。急性低钠血症在任何类型的脑损伤后的神经外科患者中尤其常见,包括脑瘤及其治疗、垂体手术、蛛网膜下腔出血或创伤性脑损伤。急性低钠血症是一种紧急情况,因为它会导致脑水肿,因为水从低渗血浆被动渗透到相对高渗的大脑,这最终是导致低钠血症相关症状的原因。这些症状包括意识水平下降、癫痫发作、非心源性肺水肿或经幕脑疝。必须及时治疗,以防止此类并发症,最大限度地减少永久性脑损伤,从而使脑损伤后迅速恢复。输注3%高渗盐水是根据症状的严重程度和血浆钠浓度下降率选择的不同给药率的治疗方法。神经损伤中低钠血症的病理生理学是多因素的;尽管抗利尿不当综合征(SIADH)和中枢肾上腺功能不全是最常见的病因。液体限制历来是SIADH的经典治疗方法,尽管在一些神经外科患者(如蛛网膜下腔出血患者)中相对禁忌。此外,许多入院病例有急性发作的低钠血症,需要高渗盐水输注。最近开发的血管加压素受体2拮抗剂是一种有前景和有效的药物,但神经外科患者还需要更多的证据。中枢性肾上腺功能不全也可能引起神经外科患者的急性低钠血症;这在临床和生化上对氢化可的松有反应。用大容量生理盐水输注治疗罕见的脑耗盐综合征。在这篇综述中,我们总结了神经外科患者不同类型低钠血症的临床表现、原因和治疗的最新证据。
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Diagnosis and treatment of hyponatraemia in neurosurgical patients

Hyponatraemia is the most common electrolyte imbalance in neurosurgical patients. Acute hyponatraemia is particularly common in neurosurgical patients after any type of brain insult, including brain tumours and their treatment, pituitary surgery, subarachnoid haemorrhage or traumatic brain injury. Acute hyponatraemia is an emergency condition, as it leads to cerebral oedema due to passive osmotic movement of water from the hypotonic plasma to the relatively hypertonic brain which ultimately is the cause of the symptoms associated with hyponatraemia. These include decreased level of consciousness, seizures, non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema or transtentorial brain herniation. Prompt treatment is mandatory to prevent such complications, minimize permanent brain damage and therefore permit rapid recovery after brain insult. The infusion of 3% hypertonic saline is the treatment of choice with different rates of administration based on the severity of symptoms and the rate of drop in plasma sodium concentration.

The pathophysiology of hyponatraemia in neurotrauma is multifactorial; although the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis (SIADH) and central adrenal insufficiency are the commonest causes encountered. Fluid restriction has historically been the classical treatment for SIADH, although it is relatively contraindicated in some neurosurgical patients such as those with subarachnoid haemorrhage. Furthermore, many cases admitted have acute onset hyponatraemia, who require hypertonic saline infusion. The recently developed vasopressin receptor 2 antagonist class of drug is a promising and effective tool but more evidence is needed in neurosurgical patients. Central adrenal insufficiency may also cause acute hyponatraemia in neurosurgical patients; this responds clinically and biochemically to hydrocortisone. The rare cerebral salt wasting syndrome is treated with large volume normal saline infusion. In this review, we summarize the current evidence based on the clinical presentation, causes and treatment of different types of hyponatraemia in neurosurgical patients.

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