🐶 Veterinary Guide to Hypernatremia in Dogs (High Blood Sodium) | Dr. Duncan Houston, BVSc (2025)
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🐶 Veterinary Guide to Hypernatremia in Dogs | Dr. Duncan Houston, BVSc (2025)
By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc
🔍 Introduction
Hypernatremia is abnormally high blood sodium—plasma Na⁺ >155 mEq/L in dogs—reflecting low free water relative to sodium. Though uncommon, it signals a critical fluid or neurologic imbalance. This guide explains causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention for 2025 pet families. 🐾
💡 What Is Hypernatremia?
- A condition when plasma sodium >155 mEq/L, causing increased osmolality and cell dehydration.
- Signs usually appear when Na⁺ >170 mEq/L—neurologic complications may follow.
⚠️ Causes & Volume Status
Hypernatremia arises from sodium gain or free water loss, classified by volume status (see flowcharts above):
- Hypovolemia: GI losses (vomiting, diarrhea), renal losses, burns, third-spacing.
- Euvolemia: pure water loss from diabetes insipidus, hypodipsia, heatstroke, fever, lack of water.
- Hypervolemia: salt/sodium gain via salt poisoning, hypertonic fluids, sodium bicarbonate.
🚨 Clinical Signs
- Initially: thirst, dehydration signs.
- Neurologic symptoms as Na⁺ >170 mEq/L: lethargy, ataxia, seizures, stupor.
- Severe: coma, intracranial hemorrhage risk.
- High mortality: ~20% in dogs with hypernatremia vs ~4% normal.
🔬 Diagnosis
- Confirm Na⁺ >155 mEq/L. Repeat labs to rule out lab error. Evaluate sodium, chloride, and osmolality.
- Assess hydration and volume (history, exam).
- Investigate causes: urinalysis, endocrine testing (ADH dysfunction), imaging for GI or CNS disease.
- Monitor neurologic status—frequent re-evaluation essential.
🏥 Treatment & Fluid Therapy
- Restore free water: use 5% dextrose IV or half-normal saline; correct slowly (<0.5–1 mEq/L/hour) to avoid cerebral edema.
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- Hypovolemic: initial isotonic fluids (LRS), then hypotonic solutions are used carefully.
- Euvolemic: hypotonic fluids are administered slowly.
- Hypervolemic: cautious diuretics after restoration, manage underlying cause.
- Calculate free water deficit with a formula; plan correction over days.
- Frequent sodium testing (every 4–8 h), monitor neurologic and overall status.
📈 Prognosis & Monitoring
- Prognosis is tied to the cause and prompt correction; severe hypernatremia carries a higher risk.
- Monitor sodium, hydration, kidney function, and neurologic signs daily until stable.
- Chronic cases need owner education and routine follow-ups.
🛡 Prevention & Owner Tips
- Provide fresh water always; check accessibility in hot climates or for sick dogs.
- Store salt, sodium chemicals securely to prevent ingestion.
- Manage diarrhea, vomiting, kidney or endocrine disease early.
- Know the signs of sodium imbalance; seek immediate vet care for neurologic changes.
🔧 Tools & Support Services
- Ask A Vet App: 24/7 expert advice on fluid therapy plans, sodium correction, and monitoring 📱
✅ Final Thoughts
Hypernatremia signals serious water imbalance and neurologic danger in dogs. Safe fluid correction, addressing the root cause, and slow sodium normalization are crucial. With attentive monitoring and support tools like Ask AVet, many dogs recover well. In 2025 and beyond, ensuring constant hydration and early vet care is essential. 🐾❤️
Download the Ask A Vet app today for personalized fluid therapy guidance, sodium monitoring, and expert support. 📱💡