Sodium: How to Read Your Blood Sodium Level

Revisado por AskAnything Clinical Team, MD-reviewedÚltima actualización 2026-04-26

Your panel says sodium 133. The lab flagged it. You feel fine. Your doctor isn't worried. What gives?

Sodium results trip people up because the number on the page is a ratio, not a measure of how much salt is in your body. It's sodium divided by water, and the body cares more about defending the ratio than about defending either piece of it. Thirst, ADH, and the kidneys all work to keep that fraction inside a tight band, because brain cells swell or shrink with even small swings.

Most "off" sodium values on routine labs are mild and reflect hydration, medications, or chronic conditions. The numbers that genuinely matter are below 125 or above 155. That's the line where the brain runs out of room to compensate.

What sodium measures

Two things to internalize.

  • Low sodium is almost never a salt problem. It's a water problem. Either there's too much free water on board, or the kidneys can't get rid of it normally.
  • High sodium is almost always a water deficit. Older adults with a dulled thirst response, hospitalized patients who can't reach a glass, anyone with diabetes insipidus.

That's why the reflexive "eat less salt" or "eat more salt" advice usually misses the point. Fix the water and the number tracks.

Sodium reference ranges

Grupo demográficoBajoAltoUnidad
Adults — normal136145mEq/L
Mild hyponatremia130135mEq/L
Moderate hyponatremia125129mEq/L
Severe hyponatremia0124mEq/L
Mild hypernatremia146150mEq/L
Severe hypernatremia155200mEq/L

The range is tight, and most labs agree on it:

  • Normal: 136–145 mEq/L (also reported as mmol/L, same number).
  • Mild hyponatremia: 130–135 mEq/L. Usually asymptomatic; very common on routine labs.
  • Moderate hyponatremia: 125–129 mEq/L. Headache, nausea, gait instability possible.
  • Severe hyponatremia: below 125 mEq/L. Risk of seizures, cerebral edema, coma. Hospital territory.
  • Mild hypernatremia: 146–150 mEq/L. Almost always reflects under-hydration.
  • Severe hypernatremia: above 155 mEq/L. Confusion, seizures, brain shrinkage. Hospital territory.

Speed of change matters as much as the number. A sodium that falls from 140 to 128 in 24 hours is more dangerous than a chronic sodium that has lived at 128 for years. The brain adapts slowly. Sudden shifts don't give it time.

What high sodium (hypernatremia) means

By the time sodium climbs above 145, the body is short on water relative to solute. Once it's in the 150s, that deficit is real.

Common causes:

  • Not enough water in. Older adults whose thirst response has dulled, nursing-home residents, hospitalized patients, anyone who can't get to fluids on their own.
  • Too much water out. Vomiting, diarrhea, heavy sweating, burns, fevers, osmotic diuresis from uncontrolled diabetes.
  • Diabetes insipidus. The kidneys can't concentrate urine. Central (pituitary) or nephrogenic (kidney). Suspect it when urine output is high and dilute despite a high serum sodium.
  • Iatrogenic. Hypertonic saline, tube feeds without free water, lithium causing nephrogenic DI.
  • Actual salt loading. Rare. Usually requires deliberate ingestion or a medical infusion gone wrong.

Replacement is slow. Bring sodium down too fast and you cause cerebral edema. Rule of thumb: no more than 10 to 12 mEq/L drop per 24 hours.

What low sodium (hyponatremia) means

Hyponatremia is the most common electrolyte abnormality in medicine and one of the most over-treated. Mild hyponatremia (130 to 135) is usually silent and dilutional.

Common causes, grouped by mechanism:

  • Heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome. The body senses low effective circulating volume even though total fluid is overloaded, and ADH holds onto more water.
  • SIADH (syndrome of inappropriate ADH). Pneumonia, CNS disease, malignancy, pain, nausea, surgery. SSRIs, carbamazepine, and opioids are the classic drug culprits.
  • Thiazide diuretics. The leading medication cause. Picture an older adult on hydrochlorothiazide.
  • True volume depletion. Vomiting, diarrhea, diuretics, salt-wasting nephropathy. Replacing both salt and water corrects it.
  • Adrenal insufficiency. Cortisol deficiency impairs free-water excretion.
  • Severe hypothyroidism. Uncommon, but classic enough to be worth checking once.
  • Primary polydipsia. Drinking more water than the kidneys can pee out. Usually requires more than 15 L per day.
  • Beer potomania, tea-and-toast diet. Low solute intake limits free-water excretion.

Pseudohyponatremia from severe hyperlipidemia or hyperproteinemia is uncommon now that most labs use direct ion-selective electrodes. Still worth knowing about.

Reading sodium over time

One sodium value rarely tells the whole story. Patterns do.

  • Stable mild hyponatremia (132 to 135) for years. Usually medication (thiazide, SSRI) or chronic SIADH. Not an emergency. Worth investigating once.
  • New-onset hyponatremia. Review medications, check thyroid and cortisol, consider heart, liver, or kidney disease.
  • Sodium creeping up over weeks. Usually under-hydration in older adults. Often a sentinel sign of cognitive decline or limited access to fluid.
  • Sodium bouncing all over the place between visits. Diuretic dosing issues, episodic GI losses, or wildly variable water intake.

For anyone on chronic diuretics, ACE/ARB therapy, SSRIs, or with heart failure or liver disease, periodic sodium monitoring is part of routine care. Usually with each medication change, and at least annually.

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When to act on sodium

  • Sodium below 125 mEq/L. Hospital evaluation. Risk of seizures and cerebral edema, especially if symptomatic or rapidly developing.
  • Sodium above 155 mEq/L. Hospital evaluation. Risk of brain shrinkage and intracranial hemorrhage.
  • New mental status changes with any abnormal sodium. Emergency department, regardless of the absolute value.
  • Symptomatic mild hyponatremia (headache, nausea, gait instability, confusion). Same-day medical evaluation.
  • Persistent sodium 130–135 on routine labs. Review medications (especially thiazides, SSRIs), check TSH and morning cortisol, consider SIADH workup.
  • Polyuria with high sodium. Investigate for diabetes insipidus.

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Tests that complete the sodium picture

  • Urine sodium and urine osmolality. The single most useful pair of tests for working up hyponatremia. Distinguishes SIADH from volume depletion from primary polydipsia.
  • Potassium. Sodium and potassium dysregulation often coexist (diuretics, adrenal disease).
  • BUN and creatinine. Establish hydration status and kidney function.
  • Glucose. Severe hyperglycemia pulls water into the bloodstream and causes "translational" hyponatremia.
  • TSH and morning cortisol. Hypothyroidism and adrenal insufficiency are reversible causes of hyponatremia and easy to miss.
  • Comprehensive metabolic panel. Sodium is rarely interpreted in isolation; the whole panel sets context.

Patterns to recognize

Combinations of values that together point at a specific clinical picture. One number rarely tells the whole story.

SIADH (syndrome of inappropriate ADH)

  • Sodium <135 mEq/L
  • Low serum osmolality (<275 mOsm/kg)
  • Inappropriately concentrated urine (urine osm >100)
  • Euvolemic on exam, no diuretic

The kidneys are holding free water despite a dilute serum — classic for SIADH from CNS disease, pulmonary disease, malignancy, or drugs (SSRIs, carbamazepine).

Next: Review medications, screen for occult malignancy or pneumonia, restrict free water as first-line.

Hypovolemic hyponatremia

  • Sodium <135 mEq/L
  • High BUN-to-creatinine ratio (>20:1)
  • Low urine sodium (<20 mEq/L)
  • Vomiting, diarrhea, or active diuretic use

Both salt and water have been lost, but water was replaced without salt. Total body sodium is genuinely depleted.

Next: Replace volume with isotonic saline; correct slowly (no more than 10 mEq/L per 24 hours).

DKA-related hyponatremia

  • Glucose >250 mg/dL
  • Sodium <135 mEq/L (often falsely low)
  • Anion gap >12, low HCO3
  • Ketones in urine or blood

Hyperglycemia pulls water into the bloodstream and dilutes serum sodium — translational hyponatremia. Corrected sodium is typically normal or high.

Next: Calculate corrected Na (add ~1.6 mEq/L per 100 mg/dL glucose above 100); treat the DKA, sodium follows.

Thiazide-induced hyponatremia

  • Sodium 125–134 mEq/L
  • On hydrochlorothiazide or chlorthalidone
  • Often older adult, often on SSRI as well
  • Normal volume status on exam

The leading medication cause of outpatient hyponatremia. Thiazides impair free-water excretion in a subset of susceptible patients.

Next: Stop the thiazide, switch to a different antihypertensive class, recheck sodium in 1–2 weeks.

Preguntas frecuentes

About 136–145 mEq/L (or mmol/L — same number) in adults. The range is tight because the brain is sensitive to even small swings in either direction.

Surprisingly little. Serum sodium is a ratio of sodium to water, not a measure of dietary salt. Healthy kidneys handle a wide range of salt intake without changing the blood number. Reducing salt intake lowers blood pressure but rarely changes serum sodium.

Mild hyponatremia in this range is one of the most common findings on routine labs and is usually asymptomatic. Common causes: thiazide diuretics, SSRIs, mild SIADH, chronic medical conditions (heart failure, liver disease), or simply drinking a lot of water before the test. Worth investigating once but rarely an emergency.

Yes, but it usually requires extreme intake (over 10–15 liters per day) in someone with normal kidney function. It is well documented in marathon runners who over-hydrate, in psychiatric patients with primary polydipsia, and in MDMA-related hyponatremia. Casual high water intake does not cause hyponatremia in healthy adults.

Almost always a water deficit. Common in older adults whose thirst response has dulled, in hospitalized patients without free access to water, and in conditions with high fluid losses (uncontrolled diabetes, heavy diarrhea). True salt overload is rare. Treatment is gentle water replacement, not "eating less salt."

In a stable, asymptomatic patient — usually not an emergency, but it warrants a workup. Check medications, urine sodium and osmolality, TSH, and cortisol. In a patient with new symptoms (confusion, seizures, gait changes), 130 with rapid onset can be dangerous and needs hospital evaluation.

Yes, when fluid losses are replaced with water alone (no salt). The classic example is the runner who sweats heavily and drinks plain water — total body sodium drops more than total body water. Replacing both salt and water (as in oral rehydration solutions) corrects it.

Slowly. Correcting hyponatremia faster than 10–12 mEq/L per 24 hours risks osmotic demyelination syndrome — a devastating neurologic complication. This is why severe or symptomatic hyponatremia is corrected in a hospital with frequent rechecks, not at home with extra salt.

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