Health Dictionary Find a Doctor

Beer potomania

For patient information, click here

Editor-in-Chief: Suresh Samson, M.D., Yale Bridgeport Hospital

Overview

Editor-in-Chief: Suresh Samson, M.D., Yale Bridgeport Hospital

Overview

Beer potomania is defined as the development of hyponatremia or low levels of salt in the bloodstream, as a result of excess beer intake coupled with poor nutritional intake. This is a syndrome of binge drinking, poor nutritional intake, and profound hyponatremia.

Pathophysiology

The pathophysiological mechanism of beer potomania can be understood through an example. Imagine someone who binged on 4 liters of beer (which essentially means 4 liters of water) with ingestion of roughly 200 mosm that day. To place this in context, a normal American diet contains 750 mosm/day, and all of it is excreted in urine to maintain a steady state. As a result of the ingestion of this large amount of beer (i.e.free water), the patient’s anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) (the hormone that causes the kidney to reabsorb free water) secretion is at its minimum to allow the kidneys to excrete maximally dilute urine. Since the maximal dilution that can be attained is 50 mosm/L, the kidneys will excrete all the 200 mosm in the diet in 4 liters of urine (50mosm/L X 4L = 200 mosm). This will indeed maintain his sodium level. If this person in our example drinks his 5th liter of beer without taking any further osmoles, then he will become hyponatremic. This is beer potomania.

Diagnosis

Laboratory Findings

A value of Uosm < 100 mOsm/kg is indicative of a complete and appropriate suppression of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) secretion, a finding seen with either primary polydipsia (including ‘beer potomania’) or reset osmostat.

References

Historical Perspective

Please help WikiDoc by adding content here. It’s easy! Click here to learn about editing.

References


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Classification

Please help WikiDoc by adding content here. It’s easy! Click here to learn about editing.

References


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Pathophysiology

Editor-in-Chief: Suresh Samson, M.D., Yale Bridgeport Hospital

Please help WikiDoc by adding more content here. It’s easy! Click here to learn about editing.

Overview

The pathophysiological mechanism of beer potomania can be understood through an example. Imagine someone who binged on 4 liters of beer (which essentially means 4 liters of water) with ingestion of roughly 200 mosm that day. To place this in context, a normal American diet contains 750 mosm/day, and all of it is excreted in urine to maintain a steady state. As a result of the ingestion of this large amount of beer (i.e.free water), the patient’s anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) (the hormone that causes the kidney to reabsorb free water) secretion is at its minimum to allow the kidneys to excrete maximally dilute urine. Since the maximal dilution that can be attained is 50 mosm/L, the kidneys will excrete all the 200 mosm in the diet in 4 liters of urine (50mosm/L X 4L = 200 mosm). This will indeed maintain his sodium level. If this person in our example drinks his 5th liter of beer without taking any further osmoles, then he will become hyponatremic. This is beer potomania.

References


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Causes

Editor-in-Chief: Suresh Samson, M.D., Yale Bridgeport Hospital

Causes

Common Causes

Beer potomania is due to a large consumption of beer (which has a poor salt content) together with a minimal intake of ordinary food. Three facts contribute to beer potomania:

  1. Beer contains a lot of free water with very little salt and protein (one liter of beer contains only 30 mg of sodium).
  2. The amount of free water we excrete depends upon number of osmoles that need to be excreted.
  3. The kidneys can dilute urine to a maximum of 50 mosm/L

References


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Differentiating Beer potomania from other Diseases

Please help WikiDoc by adding content here. It’s easy! Click here to learn about editing.

References


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Epidemiology and Demographics

Please help WikiDoc by adding content here. It’s easy! Click here to learn about editing.

References


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Risk Factors

Please help WikiDoc by adding content here. It’s easy! Click here to learn about editing.

References


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Natural History, Complications, and Prognosis

Please help WikiDoc by adding content here. It’s easy! Click here to learn about editing.

References


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Diagnosis

Diagnosis

History and Symptoms | Physical Examination | Laboratory Findings | Other Diagnostic Studies

Treatment

Treatment

Medical Therapy | Primary Prevention | Cost-Effectiveness of Therapy | Future or Investigational Therapies

Case Studies

Case Studies

Case #1


Template:WikiDoc Sources

Looking for the patient version?

Back to the patient-friendly article

© 2026 MyEClinic – IFTM Institut für Telematik in der Medizin GmbH