Sodium is not like the other electrolytes

This thread by Screaming Pectoriloquy is perfect

And a screenshot for when Twitter disappears.

A ten percent reduction in sodium drops it from stone cold normal to rather significant hyponatremia. This is a great example of how precisely sodium is regulated. Sodium regulation is tighter than all other ions. Look at a CMP with calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium added in. (Data is from UCSF).

Range is calculated by taking the difference between high and low and dividing it by the low value. https://www.ucsfhealth.org/medical-tests/phosphorus-blood-test
https://www.ucsfhealth.org/medical-tests/magnesium-blood-test
https://www.ucsfhealth.org/medical-tests/comprehensive-metabolic-panel

Here is a graph of the spread.

Two things immediately should be obvious.

    1. BUN (233%) and creatinine (117%) are not regulated anywhere close to how electrolytes are regulated. Get those guys out of here.
    2. And, the sodium (7%) and chloride (10%) range are nearly identical. Outside of the anion gap, I almost always ignore chloride. 

So let’s simplify this and remove the outliers and shadow.

Look at how tightly sodium is regulated. Regulation of second place, calcium, is THREE times as relaxed.

Every electrolyte is important, but regulating sodium regulates the tonicity in all 42 liters of the internal ocean. Apparently, this is important and sodium is allowed to wander only slightly.