NephBytes
You've checked the osmolality. It's low. The patient looks euvolemic, the urine is concentrated, the urine sodium is high. It looks like SIADH — and you're ready to make the diagnosis. Not so fast. SIADH is a diagnosis of exclusion. In this episode, we build a precise picture of what SIADH actually is — and why calling it a sodium problem instead of a water problem is the first mistake most people make. We go through the drug causes you need to know, including a detailed case of cyclophosphamide-induced SIADH in a patient with GPA where the bladder hydration protocol turns a drug side effect into a crisis. Then we go deep on the three mimics that wear SIADH's face. Adrenal insufficiency — the one you cannot afford to miss, with no hyperkalemia to tip you off in the secondary form. Hypothyroidism — the nuance of when it actually causes hyponatremia versus when a mildly elevated TSH is a red herring. And reset osmostat — the diagnosis that requires no treatment and where treating is futile. We close with the fracture data — why a sodium of 131 in your clinic patient is not something to watch and wait. Next episode: SIADH treatment — 3% saline bolus strategy, the desmopressin clamp, rescuing overcorrection, and subarachnoid hemorrhage where the rules change entirely.
8 episodios
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