Exercise-related hyponatremia: Updated WMS Guidelines

Written By :  Hina Zahid
Medically Reviewed By :  Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2020-03-19 12:30 GMT   |   Update On 2020-03-19 12:30 GMT

Philadelphia - The updated Exercise-associated hyponatremia clinical practice guidelines have been released by the Wilderness Medical Society. The guidelines stress that individuals engaged in physical and endurance activities should drink to satisfy their thirst (known as "drink to thirst") to avoid overhydration. The guidelines appear in Wilderness & Environmental Medicine.

Hyponatremia is a condition of low sodium concentration in the blood. Prolonged overhydration during exercise is the primary cause of all forms of exercise-associated hyponatremia (EAH) and should be avoided.

Appropriated management of EAH depends first on correctly diagnosing the condition. The guidelines address the assessment of patients with overlapping or nonspecific signs that can make differential diagnosis challenging, for example, with heat exhaustion or exertional heat stroke.

"Even after 40 years of worldwide documentation of EAH in both front country and backcountry physical activities there is still an ongoing need for education of the public, event directors, EMS personal, and clinicians for prevention strategies and medical management caused by overhydration of fluids that can result in rare, but life-threatening medical outcomes," explained lead author Brad L. Bennett, PhD, Adjunct Professor, Military & Emergency Medicine Department, F. Edward Hébert School of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, USA. "The typical field response for heat-related illness or when someone is dehydrated is to encourage oral hypotonic fluid intake or administer rapid isotonic IV fluids to endurance activity participants. However, such universal treatment may result in increased morbidity and mortality in the EAH patient."

The guidelines recommend that:

  • Appropriate education and coordination among participants, event directors, support crews, park rangers, first responders, and EMS transport personnel are essential in both prevention and management of EAH.
  • Prolonged overhydration during exercise, which is the primary risk factor in the development of all forms of EAH, should be avoided.
  • Sodium and/or salty snacks should be freely available for consumption along with the appropriate fluids, particularly in long, hot events in non-heat acclimatized persons.
  • Participants should drink enough to satisfy their thirst but avoid overdrinking.
  • Point-of-care testing should be done on at-risk, symptomatic patients, when available.
  • Oral fluids should be restricted if EAH from fluid overload is associated with mild symptoms.
  • Hypotonic fluids are contraindicated with suspected EAH.
  • The use of oral salt or hypertonic fluids may be effective in reversing moderate to severe symptoms of EAH when no IV hypertonic saline (3 per cent) is available.
  • Patients should be observed for at least 60 minutes after exercise to ensure no decompensation from delayed symptomatic EAH.
  • Receiving caregivers should be alerted to the potential diagnosis of EAH and fluid management restrictions when transferring care.

"It is important to note that no single recommendation for fluid hydration will work in the range of physical activities in different humidity and ambient temperatures with varied sweat rate, body mass, exercise intensity, and duration. However, for the majority of individuals, drinking according to thirst can help prevent EAH and the potential for life-threatening outcomes," commented Dr Bennett.

EAH is generally defined as a sodium concentration of less than 135 mmol/L (135 mEq/L), with severe EAH being below 120 mEq/L. Symptoms may include nausea and vomiting, headache, short-term memory loss, confusion, and lethargy, altered mental status, coma, seizures, and/or respiratory distress, some of which can be confused with other medical conditions.

For more details click on the link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wem.2019.11.003 

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Article Source : Wilderness & Environmental Medicine

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