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Hyperkalemia

This document discusses hyperkalemia, which occurs when serum potassium levels rise above 5.5 mEq/L. It describes the normal distribution and regulation of potassium in the body, focusing on renal and transcellular mechanisms. Causes of hyperkalemia include shifts of potassium out of cells due to conditions like acidosis or tissue injury, and impaired renal excretion due to factors like renal failure or medications. Management involves stabilizing the heart with calcium, shifting potassium into cells with insulin/dextrose or beta-agonists, promoting excretion via loop diuretics or cation exchange resins, and treating any underlying causes.

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100% found this document useful (4 votes)
922 views30 pages

Hyperkalemia

This document discusses hyperkalemia, which occurs when serum potassium levels rise above 5.5 mEq/L. It describes the normal distribution and regulation of potassium in the body, focusing on renal and transcellular mechanisms. Causes of hyperkalemia include shifts of potassium out of cells due to conditions like acidosis or tissue injury, and impaired renal excretion due to factors like renal failure or medications. Management involves stabilizing the heart with calcium, shifting potassium into cells with insulin/dextrose or beta-agonists, promoting excretion via loop diuretics or cation exchange resins, and treating any underlying causes.

Uploaded by

Ayanna
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HYPERKALEMIA

Introduction
 Potassium is an important ion in body, which is required
for functions of cells, especially nerve and muscle cells.

 It comes in body through food. The average daily potassium


intake in a typical diet is 70 mEq.

 Under normal conditions, excretion equals intake, with


approximately 90% of potassium excreted in the urine the
remainder in the stool.

 The normal serum level of potassium is 3.5 to 5 mmol/L

 Hyperkalemia is a disorder that occurs when the serum


potassium in the blood rises to >5.5 mEq/L.
Potassium Distribution
 The intracellular preponderance of potassium is the
result of a sodium-potassium (Na+- K+ ) exchange
pump on cell membranes that moves Na+ out of cells
and moves K+ into cells in a 3:2 ratio.

 ROLE : to create a voltage gradient across cell


membranes in ”excitable” tissues (i.e., nerves and
muscles).
 The total body potassium in healthy adults is about
50–55 mEq per kg body weight.

 In a 70 kg adult: total body potassium 3,500 mEq,


with 70 mEq (2%) in extracellular fluid.

 Because the plasma accounts for about 20% of the


extracellular fluid, the potassium content of plasma
will be about 15 mEq, which is only 0.4% of the total
body potassium.

 Plasma K+ is only the “tip of the iceberg” in terms of


evaluating total body potassium.
Illustration of the small fraction of total body K+ that is present outside cells. This example pertains
to a 70 kg adult with an estimated total body K+ of 50 mEq/kg body weight. Each gold bar
represents 100 mEq of K+ .
Serum Potassium
 The relationship between total body K+ and serum
(plasma) K+ forms a curvilinear shaped curve, with the flat
portion of the curve in the region of potassium deficiency
 In an averaged-size adult with a normal serum K+ of 4
mEq/L, a total body K+ deficit of 200–400 mEq is
required to produce a decrease in plasma K+ of 1
mEq/L,
 While a total body K+ excess of 100–200 mEq is
required to produce a similar (1 mEq/L) increase in
plasma K+.
 Therefore, for a given change in serum K+ , the change
in total body K+ is twofold greater with hypokalemia
than with hyperkalemia.
 The larger deficit associated with hypokalemia is due
to the large pool of intracellular K+ that can replenish
extracellular K+ when K+ is lost.
Mechanisms of regulation

 Renal regulation

 Transcellular shift between the


intracellular and extracellular
compartments
Renal regulation
 Potassium excretion in urine is primarily a function of K+
secretion in the distal nephron, which is controlled by
plasma K+ and (primarily by ) aldosterone.

 Aldosterone:
 Released by the adrenal cortex in response to an increase
in plasma K+ (and angiotensin II),
 Increases K+ excretion in the urine by stimulating K+
secretion in the distal nephron.
 Also promotes sodium and water retention.
 The diuretic spironolactone (potassium-sparing diuretic)
acts by blocking the actions of aldosterone in the kidneys.
Transcellular shifts
 Sodium-potassium ATPase
 Both insulin and epinephrine increase the activity of
sodium-potassium pump.

 Potassium channels
 ECF osmolality↑→H2O leaves cell→ ICF K+↑→ K+ moves
out of cell through K+ channels →ECF K+
 Exercise

 Potassium-hydrogen exchange to maintain electrical


neutrality
 In acidosis
 In alkalosis
Functions of potassium
 Maintain the osmotic integrity of cells
 Osmotic pressure in ICF
 Maintain acid-base balance
 Through potassium-hydrogen exchange
 Contribute to the reactions that take place in cells
 Transform carbohydrates into energy
 Convert amino acid to protein
 Change glucose into glycogen
 Play a critical role in the excitability of skeletal,
cardiac, and smooth muscle.
 Hyperkalemia (serum K+ >5.5 meq/L) can be a life-
threatening condition.

Etiology
 Transcellular shift (Potassium release from cells),
 Impaired renal excretion of potassium.
 Excessively rapid administration

 A spot urine K + can be useful to ascertain the source of


hyperkalemia . A high urine K+ (>30 mEq/L) suggests a
transcellular shift, and a low urine K+ (<30 mEq/L)
indicates impaired renal excretion.
PSEUDOHYPERKALEMIA
 Hyperkalemia that is present ex vivo (in the blood sample),
but not in vivo.
CAUSE
 K+ release due to traumatic hemolysis during the
venipuncture(20%) .
 K+ release from muscles during fist clenching
 potassium release from clot formation in the blood collection
tube in patients with severe leukocytosis (>50,000/mm3) or
severe thrombocytosis (platelet count >1 million/mm3).
 When pseudohyperkalemia is suspected, a repeat blood
sample should be obtained using precautions to mitigate
the suspected problem (e.g., minimize suction when
withdrawing blood).
TRANSCELLULAR SHIFT
The conditions associated with K+ movement out of
cells include
 Acidosis,
 Tumor lysis syndrome,
 Drugs, (β-blocker, digitalis, succinylcholine)
 Blood transfusions
 Tissue injury such as burns and crushing injuries
(Rhabdomyolysis)
 Extreme exercise or seizures
 Hyperglyemia
 Sepsis
Impaired Renal Excretion
 The capacity for urinary K + excretion is great enough to
prevent a sustained increase in serum K+ in response to a
K+ load. As a result, hyperkalemia always involves a defect
in renal K+ excretion.
 The common causes of impaired renal K+ excretion
include
 Renal failure: hyperkalemia usually doesn’t occur
until the GFR drops below 10 mL/min, but it can appear
earlier when renal failure is the result of interstitial
nephritis
 Adrenal insufficiency: Adrenal insufficiency
impairs renal potassium excretion, but hyperkalemia is
seen only in chronic adrenal insufficiency.
 DRUGS: Drugs that impair renal potassium excretion
represent a common source of hyperkalemia.
 Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors,
 Angiotensin receptor blockers,
 Potassium sparing diuretics,
 Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs.

 All of these agents promote hyperkalemia by


inhibiting the renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system.
The hyperkalemia from these drugs often occurs in
combination with K+ supplements or renal
insufficiency.
Manifestations of hyperkalemia
 Gastrointestinal manifestations
 Anorexia, nausea, vomitting, intestinal cramps,
diarrhea
 Cardiovascular manifestations
 Ventricular fibrillation and cardiac arrest
 Neuromuscular manifestations
 Paresthesias
 Weakness
 Muscle cramps
ECG changes in hyperkalemia
 The earliest change - appearance of a tall, tapering
(tented) T wave, most evident in precordial leads V2
and V3.
 As the hyperkalemia progresses, The P wave amplitude
decreases and the PR interval lengthens.
 Eventually, P waves disappear and the QRS complex
widens.
 The final event is ventricular fibrillation or asystole.
ECG abnormalities in
progressive
hyperkalemia.

ECG changes usually begin


to appear when the serum
K+ reaches 7 mEq/L , but
the threshold can vary
widely.
Management of Severe Hyperkalemia
 Severe hyperkalemia is defined as a serum K+ >6.5
mEq/L, or any serum K+ associated with ECG changes.
 The management of this condition has 3 goals:
1. antagonism of the cardiac effects of hyperkalemia,
2. transcellular shift of K+ into cells, and
3. removal of excess K+ from the body.
Stabilize the Myocardial Membrane
 Elevations in the extracellular potassium
concentration will result in a decrease in membrane
excitability that may be manifested clinically by
impaired cardiac conduction and/or muscle weakness
or paralysis
 Calcium antagonizes the cellular effects of
Hyperkalemia
 The response to calcium is short-lived (20–30
minutes) and it does not reduce the serum K+, so
other measures (e.g., insulin-glucose) should be
initiated to reduce serum K+ levels.
Types of Calcium
 Calcium Gluconate  can be given central or
peripherally
 Calcium Chloride  can only be given via
central line
 Has higher concentration of calcium and if
given peripherally will cause local sclerosis
and gangrene
 In hyperkalemia associated with
circulatory shock or cardiac arrest
Transcellular Shift
 INSULIN-DEXTROSE: Insulin drives K+ into skeletal
muscle cells by activating the membrane Na+- K+
exchange pump.
 A dextrose infusion is advised after insulin-dextrose
(unless the patient is hyperglycemic) because there is a
risk of hypoglycemia at one hour.
 In the setting of hyperglycemia, insulin should be used
without dextrose.
 The insulin effect is temporary (peak effect at 30–60
min), so measures that promote K+ removal should be
started.
2 Agonists (albuterol)
 Drives K2+ intracellular by increasing Na-K
ATPase in skeletal muscle
 The dose of inhaled β2- agonists (e.g.,
albuterol) needed to produce a significant
(0.5–1 mEq/L) drop in serum K+ is at least 4
times the therapeutic dose
 Effects occur in 20-30 min
 ADR-palpitations/arrhythmia
Sodium Bicarbonate (NaHCO3)
 Causes an alkalosis leading to potassium
wasting
 Only works if hyperkalemia 2o to ongoing
severe metabolic acidosis
 Onset few minutes but effects are not long
lasting
 Bicarbonate can form complexes with
calcium, which is counterproductive when
calcium is used to antagonize the membrane
effects of hyperkalemia.
Potassium Removal
Loop Diuretic
 Leads to loss of K+ in urine by inhibiting
NA-K-2CL transporter in Loop of Henle
 Need renal function and volume to get
filtrate to Loop of Henle
CATION EXCHANGE RESIN:
 Sodium polystyrene sulfonate (Kayexalate) is a cation
exchange resin that promotes K+ clearance across the
bowel mucosa.
 It can be given orally (preferred) or by retention enema.
 Kayexalate is usually mixed with sorbitol to prevent
concretions.
 Each gram of resin binds 0.65 mEq of K+, and at least 6
hours is required for maximum effect.
 Uncommon complication - necrotic lesions in the bowel -
mortality rate is high (33%).
HEMODIALYSIS:
 The most effective method of potassium removal is
hemodialysis, which can produce a 1 mEq/L drop in
serum K+ after one hour, and a 2 mEq/L drop after 3
hours.
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