The American Journal of Medicine
Volume 119, Issue 7, Supplement 1 , Pages S74-S78, July 2006

Exercise-Associated Hyponatremia: Role of Cytokines

  • Arthur J. Siegel, MD

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationRequests for reprints should be addressed to Arthur J. Siegel, MD, McLean Hospital, 115 Mill Street, Belmont, Massachusetts 02478.

Department of Internal Medicine, McLean Hospital, Belmont, Massachusetts, USA; and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Abstract 

Exercise-associated hyponatremia (EAH) has emerged in recent years as a life-threatening complication of endurance sports that may lead to fatal cerebral and pulmonary edema. Defined as a serum sodium concentration <135 mEq/L (1 mEq/L = 1 mmol/L), symptomatic EAH is a dilutional hyponatremia with abnormal fluid retention mediated by decreased urine production, which is a variant of the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion. Strategies for prevention and treatment must take into account the pathophysiology underlying this dominant clinical paradigm. Beyond educating runners to drink moderately, monitoring changes in body weight during endurance sports may facilitate the early detection of positive fluid balance characteristic of symptomatic cases. Rapid diagnosis by point-of-care testing indicates the need for fluid restriction in mild cases and emergent treatment with hypertonic (3%) NaCl to reverse acute hypotonic encephalopathy. The efficacy of arginine vasopressin V2 receptor antagonists warrants study as an alternative treatment to loop diuretics for volume overload in these patients. Nonosmotic stimulation of arginine vasopressin secretion may be mediated in part by enhanced release of muscle-derived interleukin-6 during glycogen depletion, linking exertional rhabdomyolysis to the pathogenesis of EAH.

Keywords:  Arginine vasopressin , Exercise-associated hyponatremia , Hypertonic (3%) NaCl , Interleukin-6 , Rhabdomyolysis , Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion

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PII: S0002-9343(06)00547-X

doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2006.05.012

The American Journal of Medicine
Volume 119, Issue 7, Supplement 1 , Pages S74-S78, July 2006