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

  • Asymptomatic or symptomatic bradycardia
  • Multisystem organ failure (shock, pulmonary edema, renal failure, shock liver)
  • 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

  • Hyperkalemia treatment
  • Fluid resuscitation if hypovolemia

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.