Hyperkalemia: Difference between revisions

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==Source==
==Source==


7/2/09 Adapted from Tintinalli, Donaldson, Pani
Tintinalli


[[Category:FEN]]
[[Category:FEN]]

Revision as of 04:58, 4 May 2011

Background

High = >5.5meq/L

High! = >6.5meq/L

Diagnosis

  • Always consider pseudohyperkalemia (e.g. from hemolysis)

ECG

6.5-7.5 - peaked Ts, inc PR, dec QT

7.5-8.0 - QRS widening, P flattening

10-12 - sine wave, v-fib, heart block

Differential Diagnosis

  1. Pseudohyperkalemia
    1. Hemolysis of specimen
    2. Pronged tourniquet use prior to blood draw
    3. Thrombocytosis/leukocytosis
  2. Redistribution
    1. Acidemia (DKA)
    2. Cellular breakdown
      1. Rhabdomyolysis/crush injury
      2. Hemolysis
      3. Tumor lysis syndrome
  3. Increased total body potassium
    1. Inadequate excretion
      1. Renal caused (acute or chronic renal failure-must have GFR<10)
      2. Hypoaldo
      3. Drug-induced
        1. K sparing diuretics (spironolactone), ACEI, NSAIDs
    2. Excessive intake
      1. Diet
      2. Blood transfusion
  4. Misc
    1. Sux, Dig, B-blockers

Treatment

  • 1. Membrane Stabilization
    • Calcium gluconate 1 amp IV
      • Give if ECG changes/hypotension or >7
      • Duration of effect = 30-50min
      • Caution in dig-toxic pts


  • 2. Intracellular shift
    • 10 U insulin IV w/ 1 amp D50 IV now and 1 amp in 15 min
      • Duration of effect = 4-6h
    • Albuterol neb 2.5mg x 3
      • Duration of effect = 2-4hr
    • NaBicarb 1 amp IV (over 5 min)
    • Duration of effect = 1-2hr

3. Removal

  • Kayexelate 30g PO
  • Dialysis

Source

Tintinalli