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Bedside Snapshot
  • Core dose: Cerebral edema/herniation: 150–250 mL (23.4%: 30 mL) IV over 10–20 min; Symptomatic hyponatremia: 100–150 mL 3% bolus, may repeat x2
  • Onset/duration: Osmotic effect within minutes; ICP reduction peaks 15–30 min; duration 2–6 hr depending on dose and pathology
  • Key danger: Central pontine myelinolysis if Na corrected >10–12 mEq/L/24hr; fluid overload; hypernatremia; requires central line for 23.4%
  • Special: 3% = 513 mEq/L Na⁺; osmolar agent for ICP crisis and severe symptomatic hyponatremia; monitor Na q2–4h during correction; goal Na rise 4–6 mEq/L initially
Medication Class

Hypertonic crystalloid (osmotic agent; electrolyte replenisher)

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action (Pharmacodynamics):

  • Hypertonic saline increases plasma osmolality, drawing water from the intracellular to the extracellular compartment
  • Expands intravascular volume and reduces cerebral edema
  • Raises serum sodium and tonicity
  • High chloride load can lower the strong ion difference → hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis with large doses

Disposition (Pharmacokinetics/Physiology):

  • Distributes within extracellular fluid; immediate osmotic effect
  • Sodium and chloride handled renally under hormonal control
  • No discrete drug half-life; clinical effect depends on ongoing fluid/solute shifts and renal function
Indications
  • Severe symptomatic hyponatremia (e.g., seizure, obtundation, impending herniation)
  • Intracranial hypertension / cerebral edema (e.g., TBI, ICH, SAH) — bolus for ICP crisis and/or continuous infusion targeting serum Na⁺
  • Acute neurologic deterioration from hyponatremia with risk of herniation (emergent bolus therapy)
⚠️ Critical Use: Reserved for life-threatening hyponatremia or intracranial pressure crises requiring immediate osmotic intervention.
Contraindications

Absolute Contraindications:

  • None when clinically indicated in life-threatening hyponatremia/ICP crisis

Relative Contraindications:

  • Hypernatremia
  • Hyperchloremia/metabolic acidosis
  • Severe congestive heart failure
  • Significant renal impairment/oliguria
  • Uncontrolled active bleeding where hyperosmolarity may worsen coagulopathy

Special Risk:

  • Risk of osmotic demyelination from overly rapid correction of chronic hyponatremia — identify high-risk states (alcohol use disorder, malnutrition, liver disease, severe hypokalemia)
⚠️ Osmotic Demyelination Syndrome (ODS): Avoid over-rapid correction of chronic hyponatremia. High-risk patients include those with chronic alcohol use, malnutrition, cirrhosis, and severe hypokalemia. Limit correction to ≤8 mEq/L in 24 hours in high-risk patients.
Adverse Effects

Local:

  • Pain at infusion site
  • Phlebitis
  • Infiltration/extravasation (tissue injury rare but possible)

Systemic:

  • Hypernatremia
  • Hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis
  • Hypokalemia (shift)
  • Volume overload
  • AKI signal with very high chloride loads

Neurologic:

  • Osmotic demyelination syndrome (from over-rapid Na⁺ correction)
Monitoring

Critical Labs:

  • Serum sodium every 2–4 hours during active correction
  • Stop or slow infusion if Na⁺ rises >8 mEq/L in 24 h (stricter in high-risk)
  • Urine output, urine osmolality/Na⁺ if available

Electrolytes/Acid-Base:

  • Serum chloride, bicarbonate/base excess
  • Blood gas if acid-base concerns
  • Serum osmolality if severe hypernatremia or neuro symptoms

Renal Function:

  • SCr, BUN
  • Cumulative fluid balance and signs of pulmonary edema

For Neuro Indications:

  • Neuro exam / ICP (when monitored)
  • Serum Na⁺ goal adherence
  • Avoid hypotonic co-infusions
Composition
Property Value
Electrolytes (per liter) Na⁺ 513 mEq/L; Cl⁻ 513 mEq/L
Calculated osmolarity ~1026–1030 mOsm/L
pH ~5.0 (range 4.5–7.0)
Container Sterile, nonpyrogenic; single-dose containers; no antimicrobial; pH may be adjusted with HCl
Identification
  • Generic/Official: Sodium Chloride Injection, USP — 3% (hypertonic)
  • Common Names: 3% hypertonic saline ("3% HTS")
Administration
  • May be given via well-placed peripheral IV when central access is not immediately available
  • Monitor site closely for infiltration/phlebitis
  • Use infusion pump for continuous therapy; dedicated line preferred
  • Avoid co-infusion with hypotonic solutions
  • Avoid sterile water dilution (hemolysis risk)
ℹ️ Note: Peripheral 3% NaCl is acceptable when central access is not available—complication rates are low with vigilant site assessment.
Medication Forms & Dosing

Adults — Severe Symptomatic Hyponatremia:

  • Bolus strategy (U.S. practice): 100 mL of 3% NaCl IV over 10 minutes; may repeat up to 2 additional times based on symptoms and Na⁺ (goal early rise 4–6 mEq/L)
  • Bolus strategy (European guidance): 150 mL of 3% NaCl IV over 20 minutes; may repeat 1–2 times with close monitoring
  • Continuous strategy (moderate symptoms): 0.5–2 mL/kg/h of 3% NaCl IV with Na⁺ checks q2–4 h; adjust to avoid over-correction

Adults — Intracranial Hypertension / Cerebral Edema:

  • Bolus for ICP crisis: 3% NaCl 2 mL/kg (commonly over 10–15 min). Alternative: fixed 250 mL bolus per institutional protocol
  • Continuous infusion: Titrate 3% NaCl to achieve target serum Na⁺ 145–155 mEq/L (institutional range varies) with frequent labs and neuro checks

Pediatrics:

  • Hyponatremic seizure: 3% NaCl 1–2 mL/kg IV bolus (commonly 2 mL/kg) over 10–20 minutes; repeat until symptoms improve or initial rise achieved
  • Intracranial hypertension: 3% NaCl 2–5 mL/kg IV bolus for ICP spikes (institutional), or continuous infusion with target Na⁺ per PICU protocol
Interactions & Compatibility (Selected)

Desmopressin (DDAVP):

  • Used therapeutically to control free-water diuresis and prevent over-correction ("DDAVP clamp")

Loop Diuretics:

  • May be paired to enhance free-water clearance in hypervolemic hyponatremia

Compatibility:

  • Avoid co-infusion with hypotonic fluids or bicarbonate/phosphate admixtures without compatibility data
Clinical Pearls
Initial Correction Goal: Aim for an initial Na⁺ rise of 4–6 mEq/L in the first hour for severe symptoms; then slow down to avoid osmotic demyelination syndrome.
Over-Correction Protocol: If over-correction occurs, promptly re-lower Na⁺ with D5W and desmopressin per protocol to return to a safe trajectory.
Neurocritical Care Use: In neurocritical care, 3% NaCl can be used as a continuous infusion with serum Na⁺ targets (e.g., 145–155 mEq/L) and boluses for ICP crises; choose agent based on hemodynamics and institutional preference (HTS vs mannitol).
ℹ️ Peripheral Access: Peripheral 3% NaCl is acceptable when central access is not available—complication rates are low with vigilant site assessment.
⚠️ High-Risk Patients for ODS: Identify high-risk patients: chronic alcohol use disorder, malnutrition, liver disease, severe hypokalemia. Use stricter correction limits (≤6–8 mEq/L per 24h) and consider DDAVP if over-correction occurs.
References
  • DailyMed. (2024). 3% Sodium Chloride Injection, USP — Prescribing Information (electrolyte content, pH, osmolarity).
  • Medscape. (2025). Hyponatremia: Treatment & Management. https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/242166-treatment
  • Medscape. (2025). Pediatric Hyponatremia: Treatment & Management. https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/907841-treatment