1 Emergency Consultant, Swan District Hospital, Perth, Australia
2 Medical Director London Marathon, Cardiac Department, Homerton Hospital,
London
3 Emergency Consultant, King's College Hospital, London
4 Emergency Consultant, St Thomas' Hospital, London, UK
Correspondence to: A M Goudie E-mail: adrian.goudie{at}health.wa.gov.au
| SUMMARY |
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Design Observational case series.
Setting St Thomas' Hospital, a tertiary hospital situated near the finish line of the 2003 London Marathon.
Participants All runners who presented to St Thomas' Hospital on the day of the 2003 London Marathon with altered mental state whose serum sodium concentration was less than 135 mmol/L.
Main outcome measures Presenting symptoms, volume and type of fluids administered and response to treatment (biochemical and clinical).
Results Fourteen patients were diagnosed with exercise associated hyponatraemia with serum sodium concentrations ranging from 116 to 133 mmol/L. Eleven presented with confusion. There were long delays between the finish time and presentation time for some runners. Anecdotal descriptions suggested some runners finished the race with normal mental state then became confused. There was no correlation between running time and serum sodium level. All patients received 0.9% saline and six received 1.8% saline. Despite this, some patients demonstrated falls in serum sodium concentrations. Thirteen to fourteen patients were symptomatically well the following morning, with the remaining patient significantly improved.
Conclusion Presentation of exercise associated hyponatraemia may be delayed. Optimal treatment is controversial, but the use of isotonic saline may not result in rises of serum sodium and we would suggest the early use of hypertonic fluids in symptomatic patients.
| INTRODUCTION |
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Hyponatraemic encephalopathy is a potentially life threatening condition, with cerebral oedema causing vomiting, headache, confusion, coma, seizures and pulmonary oedema.1,4,6 It is most commonly associated with the syndrome of inappropriate anti-diuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) or in the post-operative setting. Less frequent causes include psychogenic polydypsia or other forms of excessive fluid consumption.10-12 Ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) has become a relatively frequent cause in young people by producing a state of SIADH in the setting of strong encouragement of free water ingestion (to prevent hyperthermia)13. Treatment of hyponatraemic encephalopathy is controversial, with a need to rapidly correct the hyponatraemia being balanced by fear of too rapid or overcorrection,10 as this has been linked to cerebral demyelination. What should be considered a safe rate of correction is controversial. In the setting of seizures, rapid correction (7-10 mmol/L over 10 min) using sodium loads in the order of hundreds of millimoles has been advocated,4,14 although others advise slower rates of correction.10,11
In the setting of EAH, treatment recommendations are similarly variable, with regimes ranging from fluid restriction, 0.9% saline and hypertonic saline being described. A recent Consensus Conference has advised 100 mL of 3% saline repeated hourly.1,6,15 Rapid and complete recovery is usual with the return of post exercise diuresis and resolution of hyponatraemia.1,6,7,9,15
Ranging in age from 18 to 92 years, 32 563 runners completed the 2003 London Marathon, of whom 24% were women. Water stations were located every mile from 3 to 25 miles and Lucozade sport (a sports drink containing 22 mmol/L sodium)16 was available at the 5, 10, 15, 19 and 23 mile stations (DS Tunstall-Pedoe, personal communication, 2004). We have previously described the 40 runners from the 2003 London Marathon who presented to the Emergency Department of St Thomas' Hospitala tertiary level hospital situated near the finishing linewhich included one of the largest described cohorts of runners with EAH.2 The place of intravenous hypertonic saline, which may not be readily available in many hospitals and has been linked to central pontine myelinolysis10 when used in non-acute hyponatraemia, was assessed in this study.
| METHODS |
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According to a previously determined treatment algorithm, all patients who presented with collapse or altered mental state had a rectal temperature and capillary blood glucose measured. Any patient with altered mental state at presentation to the emergency department had a serum sodium concentration taken. Hyponatraemia was defined as a serum sodium concentration below 135 mmol/L; 0.9% saline was used as the initial fluid of choice for those runners assessed as being dehydrated, and for those with symptomatic hyponatraemia. Those hyponatraemic runners who did not improve as expected, or who deteriorated, were administered hypertonic saline (1.8%).
Statistical analysis was performed using Excel X for Mac (Microsoft Corporation 2001).
| RESULTS |
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All of the runners who presented with altered mental state had either low sodium or elevated temperature.2 In the hyperthermic group, serum sodium concentrations ranged from 136 to 143 mmol/L.
Seven of the 14 patients with EAH were women, compared to 24% of race finishers (P<0.03). All 14 had completed the marathon, with times ranging from 2 h 59 min 59 s to 5 h 38 min 35 s. The proportion of those runners who suffered EAH who finished under 4 h was not statistically different from total finishers (21% versus34%, P>0.3). There was no correlation between finishing time and serum sodium concentration (Figure 1, R= -0.02).
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Two patients underwent cranial computerized tomography. Patient 5 was confused and had evidence of a head injury (scalp abrasion). Patient 10 had an erroneous initial serum sodium reading taken using a venous gas sample with unbalanced sodium heparin in the accident and emergency department. This demonstrated only mild hyponatraemia, inconsistent with the clinical condition. The formal laboratory result demonstrated more profound hyponatraemia (in keeping with the clinical condition). The blood gas analyser subsequently reported a calibration error for the sodium electrode. Both cranial computerized tomography results were normal.
All patients received 0.9% saline and six received 1.8% saline, in amounts ranging from 250mL to 1000mL. Details of fluid administration and changes in serum sodium during the first 4 h for those administered hypertonic saline are presented in Table 2. Patient 1 demonstrated a transient fall in her serum sodium at 1 h (122 mmol/L to 121 mmol/L) despite being administered 500 mL/h of 0.9% saline at the time, and patient 8 demonstrated a fall over 4 h despite 2000 mL of 0.9% saline and 500 mL of 1.8% saline.
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Thirteen of the fourteen patients were symptomatically well the following morning. The remaining patient (patient 1) had improved markedly, but still had subtle memory impairment. She had made a complete recovery by the following morning. Most patients had no recall of running the marathon.
Only one patient was able to give an estimate of his fluid ingestion, of approximately 13 L consumed during the 5 h he had taken to complete the marathon. Information on NSAID use was not collected.
Attempts at follow up were made at 12 months. Relatives of four patients reported no ongoing problems, and the registered general practitioners of two reported no presentations to the practice and no correspondence from any other health facility indicating further problems.
| DISCUSSION |
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EAH is a dilutional hyponatraemia due to excess free water ingestion.1,4,5 Water and hypotonic fluids were freely available during the 2003 London Marathon. Our experience is consistent with previous reports that describe the condition occurring more commonly in women; but, unlike previous reports, we found no correlation with slow running time. We did note a significant delay between finishing and presentation to the hospital, with anecdotal reports that there were often delays between finishing and development of symptoms. We postulate that this may be related to fluids consumed at or after the completion of the marathon, which may explain the lack of correlation with running times.
In exercise associated hyponatraemia it is assumed that the serum sodium was normal prior to the event and that the hyponatraemia is acute, allowing rapid correction without the risk of demyelination.4 The treatment regime used in our patients was more conservative than recommended by some authors,6,7 resulting in rises in serum sodium over 4 h from -0.25 to 2 mmol/L/h (mean 1.24 mmol/L/h). Despite receiving relatively hypertonic fluids, two patients demonstrated transient falls in their serum sodium concentrations. We postulate that this was due to continuing absorption of hypotonic fluids and ongoing renal sodium loss in response to hypervolaemia.
The neurohumeral response to exercise is complicated with changes in circulating volume, arginine vasopressin, atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and aldosterone being described.1,17,18 A study comparing renal handling of a free water load at rest found no difference in those subjects who had suffered EAH compared to control subjects who had not.19 Despite this, individual variations in urine output and sodium loss, possibly related to hypervolaemia and high ANP, may have contributed to the differences seen. Simple formulae to calculate the required sodium requirements may therefore not accurately predict changes in serum sodium.11
| Box 1 Advice given to runners regarding drinking in 2004 and
2005 Drinking safely: a balancing act Drinking too little can lead to problems, as you need to replace some of the fluid you lose as sweat. Drinking much too much can be very dangerous and lead to hyponatraemia (water intoxication), fits and even death. There were 15 serious cases in 2003, luckily none of them fatal but all requiring hospital treatment. They had drunk far more than they needed and when they started feeling unwell thought they were short on water and drank even more. Start the race well hydrated (pale looking urine) and drink when you can, especially in the first half of the race. This will help you feel better late in the race and may prevent cramp. Do not gulp large volumes of salt free fluids (e.g. water) before, during or after the race. It is possible to become ill from drinking too much, too quickly; this condition (hyponatraemia) is becoming increasingly common in slower runners. A rough drinking guide Faster runners (under 3h 30min) on a warm day may need as much as a litre of fluid per hour (i.e. 2 pints). Slower runners should need less, particularly on a cool day, and should not drink more than a pint or so500 mL / hour. There are frequent water stations you do not need to drink at each one, just swallow a mouthful of water occasionally. If you like the Lucozade sport, drink that as well. After the finish do not drink large amounts of water. You can only rehydrate gradually over the next 24 h. Eat some salty food and space your drinks and you will not get hyponatraemia.
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Despite the relatively slow correction of hyponatraemia in our patients, none developed any further complications and all made a complete recovery allowing rapid discharge. Although follow-up data were scant, we received no reports of any late complications in this group. Earlier and more aggressive use of hypertonic fluids may have prevented the drop in serum sodium seen in some of our patients and could reduce the risk of deterioration after presentation that has been described by other authors.7,17 We would therefore advise earlier institution of hypertonic fluids than we used in this cohort.
| CONCLUSION |
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| Footnotes |
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| REFERENCES |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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Minerva BMJ, July 29, 2006; 333(7561): 268 - 268. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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