Hyperkalaemia is a serum potassium concentration above the reference range.
| Severity | K+ concentration (mEq/L) | EKG progression |
|---|---|---|
| Mild hyperkalaemia | 5.5 – 6.5 | Peaked T waves and prolonged PR segment |
| Moderate hyperkalaemia | 6.6 – 7.5 | Loss of P wave, prolonged QRS complex, ST-segment elevation, ectopic beats, and escape rhythms |
| Severe hyperkalaemia | > 7.5 | Progressive widening of QRS complex, sine wave, ventricular fibrillation, asystole, axis deviations, bundle branch blocks, and fascicular blocks |
- Causes
- Artefactual results
- Haemolysis – difficult venepuncture or patient clenched fist
- Contamination with potassium EDTA
- Thrombocythaemia
- Delayed analysis
- Oliguric renal failure
- Addison’s disease
- Medications
- ACEI/ARBs
- NSAIDs
- K+ sparing diuretics
- Digoxin
- Beta blockers
- Succinylcholine
- Acidosis
- Hyponatremia
- Hypocalcaemia
- Excess K+ therapy
- Massive blood transfusion
- Transfusion with old pRBCs
- Tourniquet
- Trauma
- Rhabdomyolysis
- Burns
- Malignant hyperthermia
- Artefactual results
- Signs and symptoms
- Asymptomatic
- Fast irregular pulse
- Chest pain
- Weakness
- Palpitations
- Light-headedness
- Differentials
- Acute kidney injury
- Chronic kidney disease
- Hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism
- Addison’s disease
- Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)
- Medication-induced
- Tumor lysis syndrome
- Acidosis
- Rhabdomyolysis
- Exogenous source, e.g., potassium supplements
- Treatment of non-urgent cases
- EKG monitoring
- Treat the underlying cause
- Review medications
- Polysyrene sulfonate resin (calcium resonium) – binds K+ in the GIT, presenting absorption
- Treatment of emergency cases – if K+ > 6.5 mmol/L or there are EKG changes
- Stabilize cardiomyocyte membrane
- 10% calcium gluconate
- Temporarily shift K+ intracellularly
- Insulin
- Salbutamol
- Remove potassium from the body
- Diuretics
- Kayexalate
- Dialysis
- Stabilize cardiomyocyte membrane
