View clinical trials related to Hyponatremia in Elderly.
Filter by:Hyponatremia was defined as a serum sodium concentration <135 mmol/L that occurred at least once during a patient's hospital stay from admission to discharge. Elderly patients with fragility fractures are particularly susceptible to hyponatremia because of their impaired physiology, multiple comorbidities (such as hypocortisolism, hypothyroidism, hepatic cirrhosis, renal disease, and congestive heart failure), polypharmacy (e.g., antihypertensives, antidepressants, and antiepileptics), hospitalization, perioperative fluid restrictions, and homeostatic stress from the fracture itself and the subsequent surgery. The study has 2 parts: Part 1: aims to to find incidence of hyponatremia in sample of 70 elderly patients with fractures around the hip, effect of hyponatremia on mental state of the patients by using Modified Mini-Mental state (3MS) examination and to find mortality rate for 6 months post admission. Part 2: aims to compare sample of 18 elderly hyponatremic patients with fractures around the hip (case group) with sample of 10 elderly normonatremic patients with osteoartharitis of knee or hip who admitted for elective joint replacement (control group) as regards; serum sodium, 3M score, and CSF glutamate to find correlation between the cognitive status assessed by 3M score and CSF glutamate as a biomarker for hyponatremia.