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Osmotic Demyelination Syndrome
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Osmotic Demyelination Syndrome
, Cerebral Demyelination Syndrome, Central Pontine Myelinolysis
See Also
Hyponatremia
Hyponatremia Management
Incidence
Rare
Incidence
: <0.05% (0.5% of neurology admissions)
Pathophysiology
CNS cells are unable to freely move
Sodium
across cell membranes
CNS Cells (esp. oligodendrocytes) are uniquely sensitive to shifts in plasma
Sodium
Oligodendrocytes are concentrated in the
Pons
, but are found throughout the CNS
Rapid
Serum Sodium
drops result in brain cell swelling
Rapid rise in
Serum Sodium
results in brain cell dessication
Potentially lethal Cerebral edema from rapid
Electrolyte
correction
Over-correction of
Serum Sodium
when <125 mEq/L
Too rapid correction of
Serum Sodium
(>0.5 mEq/hour)
Related to chronicity of
Electrolyte
disturbance
Associated with rapid
Sodium
correction in chronic
Hyponatremia
(present >48 hours)
Do not replace
Serum Sodium
more than 8 mEg/L per 24 hours
Not associated with correction of acute
Hyponatremia
(esp. <24 hours)
Severe symptomatic
Hyponatremia
(esp. <120 mEq/L) requires rapid
Sodium
replacement
Risk Factors
Chronic
Hyponatremia
(present >48 hours)
Serum Sodium
<105 mEq/L (severe
Hyponatremia
)
Severe
Malnutrition
(cancer, elderly)
Alcohol Use Disorder
Comorbid
Hypokalemia
Hyperemsis
Gravida
rum
Findings
Symptoms onset may be delayed as much as 7 days after rapid
Sodium
shift
Altered Mental Status
Severe
Muscle Weakness
(quadriparesis)
Dysphagia
Dysarthria
Coma
or
Locked-In Syndrome
in severe cases
Prognosis
Full recovery may occur in up to 60% of patients
Severe
Disability
or death in 33-55% in some studies
Prevention
Chronic
Hyponatremia
and other risk factors above are higher risk for Osmotic Demyelination Syndrome
Slow
Sodium
correction rates are important for prevention
In chronic
Hyponatremia
, do not correct
Sodium
>0.5 mEq/h or >8 mEq/day
Some recommend limiting daily maximum correction to 6 mEq/day
Acute
Hyponatremia
(<48 hours) has pardoxically higher mortality with very low correction rates (<6 mEq/day)
In contrast, faster correction (>10 mEq) were associated with lower mortality
Ayus (2025) JAMA Intern Med 185(1):38-51 +PMID: 39556338 [PubMed]
MacMillan (2023) NEJM Evid 2(4):EVIDoa2200215 +PMID: 38320046 [PubMed]
Seethapathy (2023) NEJM Evid 2(10):EVIDoa2300107 +PMID: 38320180 [PubMed]
Recognize overcorrection early and manage aggressively
Stop
Sodium
replacement
Reverse
Sodium
overcorrection
Replace urinary water loss with free water orally (or D5W at 3 ml/kg/hour) OR
Desmopressin
2 to 4 mcg IV every 8 hours
References
Swaminathan and Willis (2026)
Hyponatremia Management
, EM:Rap, 4/20/2025
Le and Drogell (2015) Crit Dec Emerg Med 29(11): 13-19
Miller (2023) Am Fam Physician 108(5): 476-86 [PubMed]
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