Variability in Serum Sodium Concentration and Prognostic Significance in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: A Multicenter Observational Study.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_B841F4B6A1BB
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Variability in Serum Sodium Concentration and Prognostic Significance in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: A Multicenter Observational Study.
Journal
Neurocritical care
Working group(s)
TBI Collaborative
Contributor(s)
Long K., Rodrigues A., Lozano A., Saxby E., Vargiolu A., Quintard H., Guillemes M., Sisson A., Allen G., Baro N., Kofler M.
ISSN
1556-0961 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1541-6933
Publication state
Published
Issued date
06/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
34
Number
3
Pages
899-907
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Multicenter Study ; Observational Study
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Dysnatremia is common in severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients and may contribute to mortality. However, serum sodium variability has not been studied in TBI patients. We hypothesized that such variability would be independently associated with mortality.
We collected 6-hourly serum sodium levels for the first 7 days of ICU admission from 240 severe TBI patients in 14 neurotrauma ICUs in Europe and Australia. We evaluated the association between daily serum sodium standard deviation (dNa <sub>SD</sub> ), an index of variability, and 28-day mortality.
Patients were 46 ± 19 years of age with a median initial GCS of 6 [4-8]. Overall hospital mortality was 28%. Hypernatremia and hyponatremia occurred in 64% and 24% of patients, respectively. Over the first 7 days in ICU, serum sodium standard deviation was 2.8 [2.0-3.9] mmol/L. Maximum daily serum sodium standard deviation (dNa <sub>SD</sub> ) occurred at a median of 2 [1-4] days after admission. There was a significant progressive decrease in dNa <sub>SD</sub> over the first 7 days (coefficient - 0.15 95% CI [- 0.18 to - 0.12], p < 0.001). After adjusting for baseline TBI severity, diabetes insipidus, the use of osmotherapy, the occurrence of hypernatremia, and hyponatremia and center, dNa <sub>SD</sub> was significantly independently associated with 28-day mortality (HR 1.27 95% CI (1.01-1.61), p = 0.048).
Our study demonstrates that daily serum sodium variability is an independent predictor of 28-day mortality in severe TBI patients. Further prospective investigations are necessary to confirm the significance of sodium variability in larger cohorts of TBI patients and test whether attenuating such variability confers outcome benefits to such patients.
We collected 6-hourly serum sodium levels for the first 7 days of ICU admission from 240 severe TBI patients in 14 neurotrauma ICUs in Europe and Australia. We evaluated the association between daily serum sodium standard deviation (dNa <sub>SD</sub> ), an index of variability, and 28-day mortality.
Patients were 46 ± 19 years of age with a median initial GCS of 6 [4-8]. Overall hospital mortality was 28%. Hypernatremia and hyponatremia occurred in 64% and 24% of patients, respectively. Over the first 7 days in ICU, serum sodium standard deviation was 2.8 [2.0-3.9] mmol/L. Maximum daily serum sodium standard deviation (dNa <sub>SD</sub> ) occurred at a median of 2 [1-4] days after admission. There was a significant progressive decrease in dNa <sub>SD</sub> over the first 7 days (coefficient - 0.15 95% CI [- 0.18 to - 0.12], p < 0.001). After adjusting for baseline TBI severity, diabetes insipidus, the use of osmotherapy, the occurrence of hypernatremia, and hyponatremia and center, dNa <sub>SD</sub> was significantly independently associated with 28-day mortality (HR 1.27 95% CI (1.01-1.61), p = 0.048).
Our study demonstrates that daily serum sodium variability is an independent predictor of 28-day mortality in severe TBI patients. Further prospective investigations are necessary to confirm the significance of sodium variability in larger cohorts of TBI patients and test whether attenuating such variability confers outcome benefits to such patients.
Keywords
Brain Injuries, Traumatic/diagnosis, Humans, Hypernatremia/diagnosis, Hypernatremia/etiology, Hyponatremia/etiology, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Sodium, Hypernatremia, Hyponatremia, Osmotherapy, Sodium variability, Traumatic brain injury
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
09/10/2020 13:28
Last modification date
05/10/2021 5:40