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A 38-Year-Old Woman Is Brought to the Emergency Department After

Question 1499

Multiple Choice

A 38-year-old woman is brought to the emergency department after a witnessed seizure.  Earlier that day, she participated in a high-altitude marathon.  She had no symptoms before the race, but toward the end she began to feel severely nauseated.  Following the race, she vomited twice and then had a generalized tonic-clonic seizure.  She reported no headache.  The patient has no significant medical history.  Her trainer insists that she had hydrated aggressively before, during, and after the race.  He is quite certain that the only medicine she had taken in the past 24 hours was ibuprofen for aches and pains.  In the emergency department, she is afebrile, blood pressure is 110/70 mm Hg, pulse is 100/min, and respirations are 18/min.  Pulse oximetry is 98% on room air.  Pupils are equal and reactive to light.  The neck is supple.  The patient is quite confused and does not fully cooperate with a neurological examination, but withdraws all 4 extremities to noxious stimuli.  Laboratory results are as follows: Which of the following is the most likely cause of this patient's current condition?


A) Cerebral edema at high altitude and inappropriate antidiuretic hormone release
B) Excessive salt loss due to perspiration
C) Hypotonic fluid loading with nonosmotic release of antidiuretic hormone
D) Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug-induced renal afferent arteriole vasoconstriction
E) Severe uncorrected hypovolemia

Correct Answer:

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