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Hyperkalemia Symptoms, Causes and Treatment

hyperkalemia treatment

Hyperkalemia treatment requires stabilizing the patient, shifting potassium into the cells, removing excess potassium from the body, and finding & treating the underlying cause.

What is the normal potassium level in the plasma?

Normal Potassium in the body is 98% intracellular (inside the cells) and 2% extracellular (in the plasma)

The normal Potassium level in the plasma is between 3.5 and 5.5 mEq/L.

Na/K ATPase pump maintains this high intracellular concentration by pumping potassium in the cell in exchange for sodium ions.

The major route of excess potassium excretion is via the kidneys.


What are the Stages of Hyperkalemia?

Hyperkalemia is a serum potassium concentration greater than its normal value i.e. exceeding 5.5mEq/L.

It can be classified into

    1. Mild hyperkalemia:  Serum potassium between 5.5 and 6.5 mEq/l
    2. Moderate hyperkalemia: Serum potassium between 6.5 and 8.0 mEq//l
    3. Severe hyperkalemia: Serum potassium of more than 8.0 mEq/L

What are the Causes of hyperkalemia?

Before initiating the work-up of hyperkalemia, the treating doctor must rule out the possibility of a lab error and pseudohyperkalemia.

Causes of pseudohyperkalemia include:


What are the symptoms & signs of hyperkalemia:

Most patients with hyperkalemia are asymptomatic. Patients may complain of non-specific symptoms like weakness, fatigue, nausea, and vomiting.

Rarely patients may develop palpitations, chest pain, muscle paralysis and shortness of breath. But the reason hyperkalemia needs the be taken seriously and treated promptly is that it causes cardiac arrhythmias which can occur without warning and at any level of hyperkalemia.


How to investigate Hyperkalemia?


ECG changes in hyperkalemia:

Hyperkalemia is associated with variable ECG changes. The most common ECG change is “Tall & Tented T-waves” with a short QT interval.

Tall & Tented T waves in Hyperkalemia

This is followed by a “Prolonged PR interval“, “Increased QRS duration“, and the “P waves disappear

Absent “P” waves in hyperkalemia

Lastly, the QRS complexes widen and a “sine wave” formation is seen before arrhythmias develop.

ECG changes in hyperkalemia
Sine waves in hyperkalemia

Hyperkalemia Treatment:

Hyperkalemia treatment has three important principles.

  1. Stabilizing the patient
  2. Removing the excess potassium from the body, and
  3. Finding and treating the cause

Stabilizing the patient requires cardiac membrane stabilization and rapid shift of the potassium into the cells.

Blood sugar should be monitored because of the risk of hypoglycemia with this method. Dextrose alone should not be given because of the variable production and release of endogenous insulin.

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