A sodium flag on routine labs usually points to water balance, not just salt intake. This patient-first guide explains the real low sodium blood test meaning, common hyponatremia blood test causes, and the follow-up questions that change care.
This guide was written under the leadership of Dr. Thomas Klein, MD in collaboration with the Kantesti AI Medical Advisory Board, including contributions from Prof. Dr. Hans Weber and medical review by Dr. Sarah Mitchell, MD, PhD.
Thomas Klein, MD
Chief Medical Officer, Kantesti AI
Dr. Thomas Klein is a board-certified clinical hematologist and internist with over 15 years of experience in laboratory medicine and AI-assisted clinical analysis. As Chief Medical Officer at Kantesti AI, he leads clinical validation processes and oversees the medical accuracy of our 2.78 trillion parameter neural network. Dr. Klein has published extensively on biomarker interpretation and laboratory diagnostics in peer-reviewed medical journals.
Sarah Mitchell, MD, PhD
Chief Medical Advisor - Clinical Pathology & Internal Medicine
Dr. Sarah Mitchell is a board-certified clinical pathologist with over 18 years of experience in laboratory medicine and diagnostic analysis. She holds specialty certifications in clinical chemistry and has published extensively on biomarker panels and laboratory analysis in clinical practice.
Prof. Dr. Hans Weber, PhD
Professor of Laboratory Medicine & Clinical Biochemistry
Prof. Dr. Hans Weber brings 30+ years of expertise in clinical biochemistry, laboratory medicine, and biomarker research. Former President of the German Society for Clinical Chemistry, he specializes in diagnostic panel analysis, biomarker standardization, and AI-assisted laboratory medicine.
- Hyponatremia means serum sodium is below 135 mmol/L in most adult labs.
- Urgent low sodium usually means below 125 mmol/L or any low sodium with confusion, seizure, repeated vomiting, or severe headache.
- Water excess is the usual issue; most patients are diluted, not truly short on dietary salt.
- Glucose correction often adds about 1.6 mmol/L to sodium for every 100 mg/dL glucose above 100 mg/dL; some clinicians use 2.4 mmol/L when glucose is very high.
- Urine osmolality below 100 mOsm/kg points toward excess water intake or very low solute intake.
- Urine sodium below 20-30 mmol/L often suggests low volume or low effective circulation, while above 30 mmol/L raises SIADH, adrenal issues, renal salt loss, or diuretic effect.
- Common medication causes include thiazide diuretics, SSRIs, SNRIs, oxcarbazepine, carbamazepine, and desmopressin.
- Endocrine causes worth ruling out are adrenal insufficiency and severe hypothyroidism; mild thyroid abnormalities rarely explain marked hyponatremia alone.
- Overcorrection matters because raising sodium by more than about 8 mmol/L in 24 hours can injure the brain in high-risk chronic cases.
What low sodium usually means on routine labs
Low sodium on a blood test usually means there is too much water relative to sodium in your bloodstream, not that you simply failed to eat enough salt. Hyponatremia begins below 135 mmol/L in most adult labs; values below 125 mmol/L or any low sodium with confusion, seizure, repeated vomiting, or severe headache need urgent assessment.
The normal adult serum sodium range is usually 135-145 mmol/L, although some labs use 136-145 mmol/L. When our team at Kantesti AI reviews a routine chemistry panel, sodium is never interpreted alone, and we read it beside potassium, chloride, CO2, glucose, and creatinine the same way I would approach an electrolyte panel in clinic.
A sodium of 132 mmol/L is often mild and outpatient, but it is not automatically harmless. Even 130-134 mmol/L can correlate with fatigue, slower attention, and fall risk in older adults, so I tell patients to judge the number against symptoms and context rather than the red flag alone; our critical values guide helps when you are deciding whether to call today or tonight.
The reason what does low sodium mean has so many answers is that the same number can come from water overload, true volume depletion, medication effects, hormone problems, or acute illness. In practice, sodium behaves less like a nutrition test and more like a water-balance signal.
First ask: is the result truly low or only looks low?
A low sodium result can reflect true hypo-osmolar hyponatremia, high glucose pulling water into the bloodstream, or the rarer lab artifact called pseudohyponatremia. Before anyone blames dehydration or tells you to eat more salt, the first step is to decide which of those three you are dealing with.
Glucose is the commonest reason a sodium looks lower than the body's actual tonicity would suggest. As a bedside estimate, sodium often rises by about 1.6 mmol/L for every 100 mg/dL glucose above 100 mg/dL, and some endocrinologists use 2.4 mmol/L once glucose is above 400 mg/dL; that is why a sodium of 129 mmol/L with a glucose of 500 mg/dL can mean something very different after correction, and our high glucose guide explains that overlap well.
Pseudohyponatremia is rarer now, but I still see it when triglycerides are extremely high—often above 1,500 mg/dL—or when paraproteins are markedly elevated. The measured sodium looks low on an indirect ion-selective electrode, yet serum osmolality stays normal, which tells me the bloodstream is not truly hypo-osmolar.
I also ask how the sample day went. Drinking very large amounts of water right before phlebotomy rarely causes major hyponatremia by itself, but it can muddy borderline results, so pre-test habits matter more than most patients expect; if you were unsure what you were allowed to drink, our water-before-a-blood-test guide can help you interpret the setup.
When low sodium is really a water-balance problem
Most true hyponatremia is a water problem, not a salt problem. Sodium falls when the kidney is told to retain water, or when water intake exceeds the amount the kidney can safely excrete.
The kidney can usually excrete a lot of free water, but only if enough solute is coming in. With a daily solute load around 600-900 mOsm, a healthy kidney can excrete roughly 12-18 liters of maximally dilute urine; if solute intake falls to 150-200 mOsm/day, as in the classic 'tea-and-toast' or beer potomania pattern, water excretion may shrink to only 2-4 liters/day.
That is why I occasionally see a sodium of 126-130 mmol/L in an older adult who is not eating much protein, is living on toast and tea, and is trying very hard to 'stay hydrated.' The body is not short on water at all—it is short on the solute needed to clear that water.
Edema states confuse people because the body can be swollen and still behave as if circulation is low. In heart failure, cirrhosis, and some kidney disorders, ADH turns on, urine sodium often drops below 20-30 mmol/L unless diuretics are onboard, and low sodium may travel with edema or a falling albumin; our low albumin guide is useful when swelling is part of the picture.
Medications that quietly drive sodium down
Common drug causes of hyponatremia include thiazide diuretics, SSRIs, SNRIs, oxcarbazepine, carbamazepine, and desmopressin. In routine outpatient practice, medications are one of the first explanations I check because the timing is often missed.
Thiazide diuretics cause hyponatremia more often than loop diuretics. The clue is often low sodium plus low potassium, sometimes appearing within 1-2 weeks of starting hydrochlorothiazide or chlorthalidone, though delayed cases happen after hot weather, vomiting, or a dose increase; our low potassium guide explains why that pairing matters so much.
SSRIs and SNRIs are another big one, especially in adults over 65, people with lower body mass, and anyone already taking a diuretic. I recently reviewed a panel where sodium slipped from 138 to 128 mmol/L within three weeks of starting sertraline, and the only symptoms were nausea, mild headache, and that vague 'I feel off' feeling patients struggle to describe.
Desmopressin deserves special respect because it directly promotes water retention, and problems often start when people keep drinking normally or more than normally. Oxcarbazepine and carbamazepine are also strong SIADH-type offenders, so one practical question after a low sodium result is: 'What started in the last 30 days, and what dose changed in the last 7 days?'
Hormone problems doctors do not want to miss
The endocrine causes clinicians try not to miss are adrenal insufficiency and, less often, severe hypothyroidism. On top of that, many low sodium results turn out to be SIADH, where ADH stays active when it should be off.
Primary adrenal insufficiency often causes hyponatremia plus hyperkalemia, low blood pressure, weight loss, or salt craving because both cortisol and aldosterone are affected. Secondary adrenal insufficiency is trickier: sodium may be low while potassium stays normal, so a normal potassium does not rule out a cortisol problem.
Morning cortisol is usually the first screen. A level below about 3 µg/dL (83 nmol/L) strongly raises suspicion, while a level above 15-18 µg/dL is often reassuring depending on assay and timing; if the sample was drawn late in the day, interpretation gets much messier, which is why our cortisol timing guide matters here.
Hypothyroidism can contribute, but mild thyroid abnormalities are frequently blamed when they are not the real cause. In my experience, a mildly elevated TSH with normal free T4 rarely explains a sodium of 126 mmol/L, whereas clear hypothyroidism with low free T4 can contribute, and our thyroid panel guide helps separate those patterns.
SIADH is the pattern where water is retained inappropriately despite low serum tonicity. The European hyponatraemia guideline recommends starting with serum osmolality, urine osmolality, and urine sodium, and SIADH becomes more likely when serum osmolality is low, urine osmolality is above 100 mOsm/kg, and urine sodium is above 30 mmol/L after thyroid and adrenal disease are excluded (Spasovski et al., 2014).
Primary versus secondary adrenal insufficiency
Primary adrenal insufficiency often lowers sodium and raises potassium because aldosterone falls; secondary adrenal insufficiency usually spares potassium because aldosterone is largely preserved. That distinction can save time when the sodium is 127 mmol/L and the potassium is completely normal.
The 3 follow-up tests that usually explain the pattern
The fastest next-step workup is usually serum osmolality, urine osmolality, and urine sodium. Add glucose, creatinine, BUN, TSH, and morning cortisol, and you can explain a surprising number of low sodium results without guessing.
True hyponatremia is usually hypotonic, meaning serum osmolality is below 275 mOsm/kg. A normal osmolality of 275-295 mOsm/kg suggests pseudohyponatremia or artifact, while an osmolality above 295 mOsm/kg points toward glucose or another osmole; if you are not sure which chemistry panel included sodium, our CMP vs BMP explainer lays that out clearly.
Urine osmolality tells us whether the kidney is appropriately dumping water. A urine osmolality below 100 mOsm/kg suggests excess water intake or very low solute intake, while a value above 100 mOsm/kg means ADH is active; then urine sodium below 20-30 mmol/L leans toward low volume, and urine sodium above 30 mmol/L leans toward SIADH or renal salt loss.
In borderline cases, I also look at BUN and creatinine because a rising BUN/creatinine ratio can support volume depletion. Our BUN/creatinine ratio guide goes deeper on that pattern, especially when vomiting or poor intake are in the story.
One nuance many websites skip: diuretics can make urine sodium look falsely high. When I, Thomas Klein, MD, see a urine sodium of 48 mmol/L a few hours after a thiazide dose, I do not call it SIADH too quickly, and if you want the full list of markers our platform can line up side by side, the blood test biomarkers guide is the cleanest place to start.
Which symptoms make hyponatremia urgent
Low sodium becomes urgent when it affects the brain or falls quickly. Confusion, seizure, repeated vomiting, severe headache, reduced alertness, or sudden gait change should be treated as same-day problems even before the exact cause is clear.
Symptoms depend on the rate of fall as much as the absolute level. A patient dropping from 140 to 128 mmol/L over 24 hours can look sicker than someone who has sat at 122 mmol/L for weeks, because the brain has less time to adapt (Adrogué & Madias, 2000); people who struggle to judge chemistry urgency often find our anion gap warning-sign guide helpful for comparison because the same 'number plus symptoms' logic applies.
Acute hyponatremia developing over less than 48 hours is the setup we worry about most for cerebral edema. Chronic hyponatremia lasting more than 48 hours often looks calmer at the bedside, but correcting it too fast can injure the brain in a very different way.
That is why hospital teams do not simply chase a normal sodium by morning. The U.S. expert panel and many modern hospital protocols aim for a controlled rise—often around 4-6 mmol/L at first, and generally not more than 8 mmol/L in 24 hours in high-risk patients such as those with alcoholism, malnutrition, advanced liver disease, or marked hypokalemia (Verbalis et al., 2013).
Why the same sodium number means different things in different people
A sodium of 132 mmol/L in a well marathoner is not the same as 132 mmol/L in a frail older adult with pneumonia or heart failure. Context changes urgency, likely cause, and how fast I want repeat testing.
Older adults often do not say, 'I feel confused.' They say they are unsteady, more forgetful, or suddenly wiped out, and mild chronic hyponatremia around 130-134 mmol/L can be enough to worsen gait and attention in that group; our senior lab tracking guide is useful when this has happened more than once.
Athletes are different. Exercise-associated hyponatremia often follows overdrinking plus persistent ADH during endurance activity, and one small bedside clue is weight gain during the event, not weight loss; our athlete recovery labs article goes deeper on that physiology.
Post-operative patients and people with pneumonia, severe pain, or heavy nausea can also drop sodium quickly because ADH surges as part of the stress response. That is one reason a sodium of 129 mmol/L the day after surgery gets more attention than the same value found incidentally on an annual exam.
What follow-up questions to ask after a low sodium result
After a low sodium result, ask whether it is new or chronic, whether glucose or medications could explain it, and whether urine tests or hormone tests are needed next. Those questions usually move the conversation from vague worry to an actual plan.
The best opening question is: 'Is this new, or has it been drifting down for months?' A single number is far less useful than a trend, and I usually want at least 2-3 prior sodium values plus the dates of any new medicines; our blood test history guide makes that much easier.
Then ask about context: 'What were my glucose, potassium, creatinine, BUN, and osmolality on the same day?' When patients line those up side by side, the low sodium blood test meaning becomes much clearer, which is why I often recommend a trend comparison view instead of reading each report in isolation.
The next useful question is: 'What would change management right now?' Good phrasing includes, 'Should I repeat sodium in 24-72 hours?', 'Do I need urine sodium and urine osmolality?', and 'Could this be a medication or cortisol issue rather than simple dehydration?'
Questions I would bring to the visit
Ask whether the result is corrected for glucose, whether urine studies were collected before any IV fluids, and whether the clinician thinks the pattern is low volume, water overload, SIADH, or endocrine. Those details often matter more than the difference between 131 and 133 mmol/L.
How Kantesti helps you review sodium trends safely
The safest way to interpret why sodium is low on blood test reports is to place it beside the rest of the chemistry panel and your timeline. That is exactly the kind of pattern review our platform was built to do.
Uploading a PDF or phone image to Try Free AI Blood Test Analysis lets Kantesti review sodium with glucose, potassium, creatinine, CO2, and prior trends in about 60 seconds. That is much closer to how clinicians actually reason than staring at one red flag in isolation.
I, Thomas Klein, MD, helped shape the guardrails we use for electrolyte flags because hyponatremia is one of the easiest results to overreact to—and one of the easiest to underreact to. The physicians on our Medical Advisory Board review high-risk pattern logic, and our medical validation standards explain how Kantesti handles lab variability and safety thresholds.
If you are new to us, About Us explains why Kantesti now supports users in 127+ countries and 75+ languages. And if you simply want a clinician-style second read before your appointment, start with our AI blood test analyzer—most patients calm down once they can see whether the pattern looks like extra water, a medication effect, or a medical issue that really does need same-day care.
Research publications and guideline references
For hyponatremia, the most useful evidence covers diagnostic sequencing, safe correction limits, and the chemistry clues that separate low volume from water excess. As of April 22, 2026, the references I still lean on most are the European hyponatraemia guideline, the U.S. expert panel recommendations, and classic physiologic reviews.
When we update low sodium content on the Kantesti blog, we give more weight to sources that change decisions at the bedside than to generic symptom lists. In real practice, serum osmolality, urine osmolality, urine sodium, glucose correction, and safe correction speed are the pieces that actually prevent mistakes.
Two Kantesti publications are especially helpful when volume status is murky: our urinalysis review on urobilinogen and urine pattern reading and the DOI-backed BUN/creatinine work cited below. They are not hyponatremia guidelines by themselves, but they add context when low sodium sits beside vomiting, kidney shifts, or unclear fluid losses.
Thomas Klein, MD, and our editorial team use those sources because sodium interpretation lives at the intersection of chemistry, kidneys, hormones, and symptoms. That is also why Kantesti AI performs best when it can compare more than one lab report and more than one biomarker at the same time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is low sodium on a blood test always serious?
Low sodium is not always dangerous, but the context matters. A sodium of 130-134 mmol/L is often mild and outpatient, while a sodium below 125 mmol/L or any low sodium with confusion, seizure, repeated vomiting, or severe headache needs urgent medical review. The speed of the drop matters as much as the number, so a rapid fall from 140 to 128 mmol/L can be more dangerous than a stable chronic value of 123 mmol/L. That is why clinicians ask about symptoms, prior results, and recent illness before deciding how urgent the result really is.
Can drinking too much water cause low sodium?
Yes, drinking too much water can cause hyponatremia, especially when water intake exceeds what the kidneys can excrete. The risk rises if you also have very low solute intake, endurance exercise, nausea, or medications that keep ADH active. In practical terms, some patients can excrete 12-18 liters of dilute urine per day when solute intake is normal, but only about 2-4 liters per day when solute intake is very low. That is why low sodium after heavy water intake is often really a water-plus-low-solute problem, not just a hydration problem.
Does low sodium mean I should eat more salt?
Usually no. Most low sodium results reflect excess water relative to sodium, not a true lack of dietary salt, so adding salty foods alone often does not fix the underlying issue. If the cause is SIADH, heart failure, cirrhosis, or a medication effect, the real treatment may involve fluid adjustment, medication changes, or further testing rather than simply eating more salt. Severe symptoms or sodium below 125 mmol/L should not be self-treated at home because the way sodium is corrected matters.
What medications commonly cause hyponatremia?
Thiazide diuretics, SSRIs, SNRIs, oxcarbazepine, carbamazepine, and desmopressin are among the most common medication causes of low sodium. Thiazide-related cases often appear within 1-2 weeks of starting treatment and may come with low potassium, while SSRI-related hyponatremia is especially common in adults over 65 years old. Desmopressin is high risk because it directly promotes water retention, particularly if fluid intake stays high. Any sodium drop after a new prescription, a dose increase, or a heat wave deserves a medication review.
What tests usually come after a low sodium result?
The core follow-up tests are serum osmolality, urine osmolality, and urine sodium. Clinicians usually add glucose, creatinine, BUN, potassium, TSH, and a morning cortisol, because those markers help separate water excess, volume depletion, medication effects, adrenal insufficiency, and severe hypothyroidism. Serum osmolality below 275 mOsm/kg supports true hypotonic hyponatremia, urine osmolality below 100 mOsm/kg points toward excess water or low solute intake, and urine sodium above 30 mmol/L raises SIADH or renal causes. If diuretics were taken the same day, urine sodium can be harder to interpret.
When should I go to the ER for low sodium?
Go to urgent care or the ER if low sodium comes with confusion, seizure, repeated vomiting, severe headache, fainting, new severe weakness, or a clear drop in alertness. Many clinicians also treat sodium below 125 mmol/L as urgent, especially if the result is new or falling quickly. Recent surgery, pneumonia, heavy endurance exercise, or a new medication makes a borderline number more concerning because the sodium may still be dropping. If you cannot keep fluids down or you are acting noticeably different, do not wait for a routine callback.
Can thyroid or adrenal problems cause low sodium?
Yes, but adrenal problems matter more often than patients are told. Adrenal insufficiency can lower sodium by increasing ADH activity, and primary adrenal insufficiency often also raises potassium, although secondary adrenal insufficiency may leave potassium normal. Severe hypothyroidism can contribute to low sodium, but mild TSH elevation with normal free T4 rarely explains a markedly low sodium by itself. That is why morning cortisol and a proper thyroid panel are often ordered when the cause is not obvious.
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📚 Referenced Research Publications
Kantesti AI (2026). BUN/Creatinine Ratio Explained: Kidney Function Test Guide. Kantesti AI Medical Research.
Kantesti AI (2026). Urobilinogen in Urine Test: Complete Urinalysis Guide 2026. Kantesti AI Medical Research.
📖 External Medical References
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⚕️ Medical Disclaimer
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment decisions.
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Written by Dr. Thomas Klein with review by Dr. Sarah Mitchell and Prof. Dr. Hans Weber.
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