Prevalence and Outcome of Hyponatremia in Critically Ill Children Admitted to The Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Tertiary Care Hospital – A Cohort Study

Background: Hyponatremia is the most common electrolyte disturbance observed in hospitalized children with an incidence of 15 - 45%. The proportion is found to be higher in ICU setting. However, presence of hyponatremia worsens the prognosis in ill patients. Objective: To find the prevalence and ou...

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Main Authors: Rishika Jothi Perumalsamy, Sheeja Sugunan, Rekha Krishnan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dr. Annil Mahajan 2025-04-01
Series:JK Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.jkscience.org/index.php/JK-Science/article/view/349
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author Rishika Jothi Perumalsamy
Sheeja Sugunan
Rekha Krishnan
author_facet Rishika Jothi Perumalsamy
Sheeja Sugunan
Rekha Krishnan
author_sort Rishika Jothi Perumalsamy
collection DOAJ
description Background: Hyponatremia is the most common electrolyte disturbance observed in hospitalized children with an incidence of 15 - 45%. The proportion is found to be higher in ICU setting. However, presence of hyponatremia worsens the prognosis in ill patients. Objective: To find the prevalence and outcome of patients having hyponatremia on morbidity and mortality in PICU. Material and Methods: This prospective cohort study conducted at Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) in a tertiary care teaching hospital in Kerala during 6-month period. Results: Out of 410 patients, 253 had hyponatremia on admission with prevalence of 61.71%, 161 had norm natremia and 3 had hypernatremia. Hyponatremia was frequent among patients with pediatric risk of mortality score > 5 %. Severe hyponatremia was also associated with increase in length of PICU stay [p=0.024], increase in requirement of mechanical ventilation and mortality [p = <0.001] in comparison to milder group. Hence hyponatremia severity was independent risk factor of mortality in PICU, but might also confound other risk factors that render the children requiring prolonged hospital stay, mechanical ventilation and mortality. Conclusion: Hyponatremia is an independent prognostic factor for mortality: however, the reason for this remains unclear. Hence early recognition of hyponatremia and appropriate intervention will improve the outcome.
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spelling doaj-art-7301d0b4b3b34750a69cdad83bbc3d732025-08-20T02:11:50ZengDr. Annil MahajanJK Science0972-11772025-04-01272Prevalence and Outcome of Hyponatremia in Critically Ill Children Admitted to The Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Tertiary Care Hospital – A Cohort StudyRishika Jothi PerumalsamySheeja SugunanRekha Krishnan Background: Hyponatremia is the most common electrolyte disturbance observed in hospitalized children with an incidence of 15 - 45%. The proportion is found to be higher in ICU setting. However, presence of hyponatremia worsens the prognosis in ill patients. Objective: To find the prevalence and outcome of patients having hyponatremia on morbidity and mortality in PICU. Material and Methods: This prospective cohort study conducted at Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) in a tertiary care teaching hospital in Kerala during 6-month period. Results: Out of 410 patients, 253 had hyponatremia on admission with prevalence of 61.71%, 161 had norm natremia and 3 had hypernatremia. Hyponatremia was frequent among patients with pediatric risk of mortality score > 5 %. Severe hyponatremia was also associated with increase in length of PICU stay [p=0.024], increase in requirement of mechanical ventilation and mortality [p = <0.001] in comparison to milder group. Hence hyponatremia severity was independent risk factor of mortality in PICU, but might also confound other risk factors that render the children requiring prolonged hospital stay, mechanical ventilation and mortality. Conclusion: Hyponatremia is an independent prognostic factor for mortality: however, the reason for this remains unclear. Hence early recognition of hyponatremia and appropriate intervention will improve the outcome. http://journal.jkscience.org/index.php/JK-Science/article/view/349HyponatremiaSerum SodiumIntensive Care Unit
spellingShingle Rishika Jothi Perumalsamy
Sheeja Sugunan
Rekha Krishnan
Prevalence and Outcome of Hyponatremia in Critically Ill Children Admitted to The Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Tertiary Care Hospital – A Cohort Study
JK Science
Hyponatremia
Serum Sodium
Intensive Care Unit
title Prevalence and Outcome of Hyponatremia in Critically Ill Children Admitted to The Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Tertiary Care Hospital – A Cohort Study
title_full Prevalence and Outcome of Hyponatremia in Critically Ill Children Admitted to The Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Tertiary Care Hospital – A Cohort Study
title_fullStr Prevalence and Outcome of Hyponatremia in Critically Ill Children Admitted to The Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Tertiary Care Hospital – A Cohort Study
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence and Outcome of Hyponatremia in Critically Ill Children Admitted to The Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Tertiary Care Hospital – A Cohort Study
title_short Prevalence and Outcome of Hyponatremia in Critically Ill Children Admitted to The Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Tertiary Care Hospital – A Cohort Study
title_sort prevalence and outcome of hyponatremia in critically ill children admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit in tertiary care hospital a cohort study
topic Hyponatremia
Serum Sodium
Intensive Care Unit
url http://journal.jkscience.org/index.php/JK-Science/article/view/349
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