Long-Term Clinical Relevance of Hyponatremia Identified During Acute Phase of Myocardial Infarction.

Journal: Journal Of Clinical Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Background/

Objectives: Hyponatremia is associated with increased mortality in the general hospital population. We sought to investigate whether hyponatremia affects the long-term survival of patients following a myocardial infarction (MI) in both ST-segment elevation (STEMI) and non-ST elevation (NSTEMI) presentations.

Methods: In this study, 862 MI patients who were hospitalized between 2012 and 2017 were retrospectively followed-up within the median time period of 41.9 [28.2-73.5] months. All participants were assigned to a hyponatremic or normonatremic group with hyponatremia defined as a sodium level of less than 135 mEq/L on admission.

Results: In the acute phase of an MI, hyponatremia was diagnosed in 31 (3.6%) patients. The patients with hyponatremia were less often male (38.7 vs. 70.4%, p < 0.001), and less frequently had Killip class I (63.3 vs. 80%) but more often had Killip class IV on admission (16.7 vs. 4.2%, p = 0.024) and more often had a history of impaired renal function (32.3 vs. 15.5%, p = 0.013) than those with normonatremia. Hyponatremic patients had higher troponin T levels on admission by 75.1% (p = 0.003), a higher isoenzyme MB of creatine kinase level by 34.4% (p = 0.006), and lower hemoglobin (by 8.5%, p = 0.001) levels as compared to the normonatremia group. Long-term mortality was significantly higher in the patients with hyponatremia versus normonatremia (18 [58.1%] vs. 243 [29.2%], log-rank p < 0.001). This was driven by differences in the NSTEMI population (65 vs. 30.5%, p < 0.001). By a Cox proportional hazard regression analysis, hyponatremia was associated with a higher long-term mortality (hazard ratio [HR] of 2.222, a 95% confidence interval [CI] of 1.309-3.773, and p = 0.003).

Conclusions: Hyponatremia rarely identified in acute phase of MI was associated with higher long-term mortality, particularly in the NSTEMI population.

Authors
Karolina Eliasz, Konrad Stępień, Maja Wojtylak, Oliwia Andrasz, Katarzyna Majka, Gabriela Mazurek, Grzegorz Horosin, Jakub Plizga, Karol Nowak, Krzysztof Krawczyk, Mateusz Podolec, Jadwiga Nessler, Jarosław Zalewski