Brash syndrome

Background

  • Combination of following:
    • Bradycardia
    • Renal failure
    • AV node blocker: beta-blocker, verapamil or diltiazem
    • Shock
    • Hyperkalemia
  • Vicious cycle in setting of medications, hyperkalemia, renal failure
  • Renal failure causes hyperkalemia and accumulation of AV node blockers, hyperkalemia synergizes with AV node blockers to cause bradycardia and hypoperfusion, hypoperfusion worsens renal failure [1]

Clinical Features

  • Symptoms of bradycardia
  • Uremia
  • Altered mental status

Differential Diagnosis

  • Differential bradycardia
  • Differential renal failure
  • pure hyperkalemia
  • pure AV node blocker intoxication

Evaluation

  • Brash syndrome patients can have mild hyperkalemia while pure hyperkalemia to cause bradycardia usually requires more dramatic elevation of potassium level
  • ECG findings with bradycardia without other findings of hyperkalemia (QRS widening, peaked T waves) may favor BRASH
  • pure AV blocker intoxication may or may not have hyperkalemia, need in BRASH. BRASH syndrome patients typically adherent to medications, not usually large ingestion

Management

Disposition

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Hegazi MO, et al. Junctional bradycardia with verapamil in renal failure--care required even with mild hyperkalemia. J Clin PHarm Ther. 2012;37(6):726-8.