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    Point-of-care ultrasound is a useful adjunct tool to a clinician's assessment in the evaluation of severe hyponatraemia

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    Author
    Al Alaisi, Salam
    Coats, Timothy
    Levy, Miles
    Melson, Eka
    Rahman, Faizanur
    Rahman, Latif
    Reddy, Narendra
    Sardar, Muhammad
    Shafiq, Shahriar
    Keyword
    POCUS
    fluid
    hyponatraemia
    ultrasound
    Date
    2024-01-16
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1111/cen.15024
    Publisher's URL
    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cen.15024
    Abstract
    Introduction: Hyponatraemia is the most common electrolyte disorder in inpatients resulting mainly from an imbalance in water homeostasis. Intravascular fluid status assessment is pivotal but is often challenging given multimorbidity, polypharmacy and diuretics use. We evaluated the utility of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) as an adjunct tool to standard practice for fluid assessment in severe hyponatraemia patients. Methods: Patients presenting with severe hyponatremia (Serum Sodium [Na] < 120 mmol/L; Normal range: 135-145 mol/L), managed by standard care were included. Hyponatraemia biochemistry work-up and POCUS examination were undertaken. Both clinician and POCUS independently assigned one of the three fluid status groups of hypovolaemia, hypervolaemia or euvolaemia. The final diagnosis of three fluid status groups at admission was made at the time of discharge by retrospective case review. Clinician's (standard of care) and POCUS fluid assessments were compared to that of the final diagnosis at the time of discharge. Results: n = 19 patients were included. Median Na on admission was 113 mmol/L (109-116), improved to 129 ± 3 mmol/L on discharge. POCUS showed the higher degree of agreement with the final diagnosis (84%; n = 16/19), followed by the clinician (63%; n = 12/19). A trend towards higher accuracy of POCUS compared to clinician assessment of fluid status was noted (84% vs. 63%, p = 0.1611). Biochemistry was unreliable in 58% (n = 11/19) likely due to renal failure, polypharmacy or diuretic use. Inappropriate emergency fluid management was undertaken in 37% (n = 7/19) of cases based on initial clinician assessment. Thirst symptom correlated to hypovolaemia in 80% (4/5) cases. Conclusion: As subjective clinical and biochemistry assessments of fluid status are often unreliable due to co-morbidities and concurrent use of medications, POCUS can be a rapid objective diagnostic tool to assess fluid status in patients with severe hyponatraemia, to guide accurate emergency fluid management.
    Citation
    Rahman, L. R., Melson, E., Alousi, S. A., Sardar, M., Levy, M. J., Shafiq, S., Rahman, F., Coats, T., & Reddy, N. L. (2024). Point-of-care ultrasound is a useful adjunct tool to a clinician's assessment in the evaluation of severe hyponatraemia. Clinical endocrinology, 10.1111/cen.15024. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1111/cen.15024
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/18245
    Collections
    Imaging
    Emergency Medicine
    Geriatric Medicine and Neurosciences
    Endocrinology

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