[pct-l] Hyponatremia and salt intake
Ellen Shopes
igellen at comcast.net
Sat Dec 26 19:15:13 CST 2009
Subject: Hyponatremia
>A number of points regarding hyponatremia...
> 1. it's occurence and symptomology is documented in the hiking
> population: see articles published about Grand Canyon hikers.
> 2. it seems to occur more often in women than men (there may be
> physiologic reasons for this, as male/female mice handle excess brain
> water differently).
> 3. it's symptoms are so similar to heat exhaustion that only a blood test
> can definitively diagnose it.
> 4. the symptoms occur when there is a rapid change in body sodium levels.
> (People can adapt to chronically low sodium levels.)
> 5. while it is true that sodium content in sweat decreases during
> acclimitization to the heat, the total volume of sweat increases (so
> sodium losses overall remain about the same).
> 6. hyponatremia is much less common than heat exhaustion. For every 100
> cases of heat-related problems at Grand Canyon, 90 were heat exhaustion, 9
> were hyponatremia, and 1 was heat stroke.
>
> The symptoms of hyponatremia include headache, nausea, vomiting, muscle
> cramps, altered mental status. People usually (but not always!) produce
> copious clear urine; this can be your lone clue out there in the desert
> that you are drinking too much: look at your urine. If it looks like you
> could drink it, you are probably drinking too much.
>
> The alterations in mental status can be quite bizzare. I remember one
> person who tried to drink from her flashlight. Another was ready to 'duke
> it out' with rangers and her boyfriend, who were trying to get her water
> bottle from her. Another guy described it to me as a 'neat kind of high';
> he seemed to be having almost a LSD kind of experience.
>
> Be careful out there!
> Elderly Ellen
>
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