Hyperkalemia: Difference between revisions
| Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
A. Increased potassium release from cells | A. Increased potassium release from cells | ||
* 1. Pseudohyperkalemia | * 1. Pseudohyperkalemia | ||
** a. Hemolysis of specimen | ** a. Hemolysis of specimen | ||
** b. Leukocytosis and thrombocytosis | ** b. Leukocytosis and thrombocytosis | ||
*** 1. K+ increases by 0.15 meq for every 100,000 elevation in plt count | *** 1. K+ increases by 0.15 meq for every 100,000 elevation in plt count | ||
* 2. Metabolic Acidosis | * 2. Metabolic Acidosis | ||
* | ** a. Drives potassium out of cells | ||
* 3. Insulin deficiency | |||
* 4. Hyperosmolality | |||
* 5. Cellular breakdown | |||
** a. Rhabdomyolysis | ** a. Rhabdomyolysis | ||
** b. Hemolysis | ** b. Hemolysis | ||
| Line 35: | Line 37: | ||
** d. Crush | ** d. Crush | ||
B. | B. Reduced urinary potassium excretion | ||
* 1 | * 1. Renal failure - must have GFR <10 | ||
* 2. Aldosterone deficiency | |||
** | ** a. Addison's disease | ||
** b. ACEI | |||
* 3. Aldosterone resistance | |||
** a. Diuretics - Amiloride, spironolactone, triamterene | |||
** c. Drug-induced (potassium sparing diuretics [e.g., spironolactone] and ACE-inhibitors) | ** c. Drug-induced (potassium sparing diuretics [e.g., spironolactone] and ACE-inhibitors) | ||
* | * 4. Hypoperfusion | ||
* 5. Excessive intake | |||
** a. Diet, meds | ** a. Diet, meds | ||
** b. Blood transfusion | ** b. Blood transfusion | ||
C | C. Misc | ||
* 1. Sux, digoxin overdose, B-blockers (only significant cause if pt also has renal failure) | |||
* 1. Sux, | |||
==Treatment== | ==Treatment== | ||
Revision as of 21:44, 1 March 2011
Background
High = >5.5meq/L High! = >6.5meq/L
Diagnosis
Always consider pseudohyperkalemia (e.g. from hemolysis)
ECG
6.5 - peaked Ts, inc PR, dec QT
7.5 - QRS widening, P flattening
8 - sine wave, v-fib, heart block
Differential Diagnosis
A. Increased potassium release from cells
- 1. Pseudohyperkalemia
- a. Hemolysis of specimen
- b. Leukocytosis and thrombocytosis
- 1. K+ increases by 0.15 meq for every 100,000 elevation in plt count
- 2. Metabolic Acidosis
- a. Drives potassium out of cells
- 3. Insulin deficiency
- 4. Hyperosmolality
- 5. Cellular breakdown
- a. Rhabdomyolysis
- b. Hemolysis
- c. Tumor lysis syndrome
- d. Crush
B. Reduced urinary potassium excretion
- 1. Renal failure - must have GFR <10
- 2. Aldosterone deficiency
- a. Addison's disease
- b. ACEI
- 3. Aldosterone resistance
- a. Diuretics - Amiloride, spironolactone, triamterene
- c. Drug-induced (potassium sparing diuretics [e.g., spironolactone] and ACE-inhibitors)
- 4. Hypoperfusion
- 5. Excessive intake
- a. Diet, meds
- b. Blood transfusion
C. Misc
- 1. Sux, digoxin overdose, B-blockers (only significant cause if pt also has renal failure)
Treatment
- 1. Calcium Gluconate 1 amp IV
- a. Give only if ECG changes/hypotension/or >7
- b. Can give multiple times
- c. Can also give CaCl 1 amp (but can lead to calcium toxicity)
- d. Caution in dig-toxic patients!
- e. Effect begins within minutes, lasts 30-60 minutes
- 2. Albuterol neb 10mg in 4mL saline over 10 min
- a. Peak effect within 90 min
- b. Lowers K ~ 0.5-1.5
- 3. Reg insulin 10 U IV with 1 amp D50W IV now, and 1 amp in 15 min
- a. Effect begins in 10-20 min, peaks at 30-60 min, lasts 4-6 hours
- b. Lowers K ~ 0.5 - 1.2
- 4. Bicarbonate
- a. Controversial
- b. NaBicarb 1 amp IV (over 5 min)
- 5. Kayexalate 30g PO or 50g PR (may cause hypernatremia and volume overload)
- 6. Dialyisis
Source
7/2/09 Adapted from Tintinalli, Donaldson, Pani
