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Hyponatremia and Renal Wasting of Sodium in Patients with Malfunction of the Central Nervous System
98
Citations
22
References
1960
Year
Electrolyte DisorderUrologyRenal FunctionSodium HomeostasisMedicineRenal WastingPhysiologyElectrolyte PhysiologyElectrolyte DisturbanceCentral Nervous SystemInappropriate SecretionAldosterone PhysiologyChronic Kidney DiseasePotassium HomeostasisNephrologyHealth Sciences
SEVERAL reports of patients with Central-nervous-system disorders, hyponatremia and an abnormally high urinary excretion of sodium have appeared in the literature.1 2 3 4 In some the defect in electrolyte physiology was attributed to faulty renal tubular reabsorption of sodium. More recently, Schwartz et al.,5 , 6 Epstein and Levitin,7 Carter, Rector and Seldin,8 McCrory and Macaulay9 and Fourman and Leeson10 have presented cases of hyponatremia that were apparently related to a sustained and inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone.In the past two years we have observed 4 patients with manifestations of deranged function of the central nervous system in whom hyponatremia appeared to be . . .
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