All Stories

  1. Use of Hypotonic Maintenance Intravenous Fluids and Hospital-Acquired Hyponatremia Remain Common in Children Admitted to a General Pediatric Ward
  2. Misconceptions in the Treatment of Dehydration in Children
  3. Mild prolonged chronic hyponatremia and risk of hip fracture in the elderly
  4. Renal Replacement Therapy in Children
  5. Hyponatremia due to Severe Primary Hypothyroidism in an Infant
  6. Maintenance Intravenous Fluids in Acutely Ill Patients
  7. In Reply to ‘Treatment of Hyponatremic Encephalopathy’
  8. Treatment of Hyponatremic Encephalopathy With a 3% Sodium Chloride Protocol: A Case Series
  9. Hyponatraemia: Isotonic fluids prevent hospital-acquired hyponatraemia
  10. Management of Hyponatremia in Various Clinical Situations
  11. Electrolyte Disorders in the Newborn
  12. Complement Factor H-Related Protein 1 Deficiency and Factor H Antibodies in Pediatric Patients with Atypical Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome
  13. Renal disorders in pediatrics
  14. Maintenance intravenous fluid prescribing practices among paediatric residents
  15. Fluid/Electrolyte/Acid–Base Abnormalities
  16. Maintenance intravenous fluids with 0.9% sodium chloride do not produce hypernatraemia in children
  17. Prevention of Hospital-Acquired Hyponatremia: Do We Have the Answers?
  18. Postoperative hyponatremia following calvarial vault remodeling in craniosynostosis
  19. Intravenous fluid management for the acutely ill child
  20. In Response
  21. Disorders of water and sodium homeostasis
  22. Improving intravenous fluid therapy in children with gastroenteritis
  23. 100 cc 3% sodium chloride bolus: a novel treatment for hyponatremic encephalopathy
  24. Water Water Everywhere: Standardizing Postoperative Fluid Therapy with 0.9% Normal Saline
  25. Bone Disease as a New Complication of Hyponatremia: Moving Beyond Brain Injury
  26. New aspects in the pathogenesis, prevention, and treatment of hyponatremic encephalopathy in children
  27. Hyponatremia in Preterm Neonates: Not a Benign Condition
  28. Diabetes Insipidus and SIADH
  29. Isotonic maintenance fluids do not produce hypernatraemia
  30. 0.9% saline solution for the prevention of hospital-acquired hyponatremia: Why is there still doubt?
  31. Exercise-Associated Hyponatremia: Why Are Athletes Still Dying?
  32. Exercise-Associated Hyponatremia Masquerading as Acute Mountain Sickness: Are We Missing the Diagnosis?
  33. Can the Routine Administration of Hypotonic Parenteral Fluids Be Justified?
  34. Hospital-acquired hyponatremia—why are hypotonic parenteral fluids still being used?
  35. Fluid Replacement for Severe Hyponatremia
  36. To the Editor
  37. Prevention and treatment of hyponatremia in children: old habits die hard
  38. Dysnatremias: Why Are Patients Still Dying?
  39. Preventing neurological complications from dysnatremias in children
  40. Hospital-induced hyponatremia
  41. Reducing Risks of Hospital Acquired Hyponatremia
  42. Hypotonic fluids should not be used in volume-depleted children
  43. Hypotonic fluids should not be used in volume-depleted children
  44. Hypotonic fluids should not be used in volume-depleted children
  45. Hospital-Acquired Hyponatremia Is Associated With Excessive Administration of Intravenous Maintenance Fluid: In Reply
  46. Hospital-Acquired Hyponatremia: Why Are There Still Deaths?
  47. Dysnatremias in the Critical Care Setting
  48. The pathophysiology and treatment of hyponatraemic encephalopathy: an update
  49. Prevention of Hospital-Acquired Hyponatremia: A Case for Using Isotonic Saline
  50. The Changing Pattern of Hypernatremia in Hospitalized Children
  51. Hyperglycemia Associated with Hypernatremia in Non-diabetic Patients. 1675
  52. Pediatric Hypernatremia: A Disease of the Disabled and Critically Ill Child. 1676
  53. Hypernatremia in Hospitalized Patients
  54. Hyponatremia
  55. Hyponatremia, Exercise Associated
  56. 110 Hyponatremia and Hypernatremia