No, because caffeine is a diuretic which removes salt with the water. An aquaretic, such as tolvaptan (Samsca), removes just the water, leaving the salt behind.
If the oral is not treated it will spread & cause death.
Bacterial infections are treated with oral, Intramuscular, and/or intravenous antibiotic medication.
SIADH or Syndrome of inappropriate anitidiuretic hormone secretion can cause fluid overload and hyponatremia. It can be caused by a number of different conditions such as meningitis, cancers, pneumonia, and even some drugs can cause SIADH like SSRI's or morphine.
Increased and overly concentrated.
Chlamydia isn't treated with a shot. It's treated with oral medication (pills). Gonorrhea is treated with an antibiotic injection.
with SIADH, there is overproduction of ADH, Anti-Diuretic Hormone, which causes the kidneys to hold on to water. The goal is to decrease the amount of fluid in the body until the cause of the SIADH can be corrected. The excess fluid in the vascular due to the increased ADH causes the sodium in the blood to become diluted. Your patient then has hyponatremia.
Trichomoniasis is not treated with creams. Oral medication is required.
Morphine stimulates the release of vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone)
Diabetes type 2
Especially at the extremes of age, this should be watched for and treated with either Oral Rehydration Solution or intravenous fluid replacement.
Patients with symptomatic cholelithiasis can be treated with certain medications called oral bile acid litholysis or oral dissolution therapy
Diabetes insipidus doesn't produce enough ADH or respond to it, thus produces too much urine. SIADH is the opposite and retains too much water, rather than excreting it excessively in DI.