Clinical features
- Mild ( K+ 3.0–3.5 mmol/L): asymptomatic.
- Muscle: muscular weakness, tiredness.
- Heart:
- ventricular ectopic beats, arrhythmias,
- arrhythmogenic effects of digoxin may be potentiated.
- Gut: Paralytic ileus.
- Kidney:
- renal tubular damage (hypokalemic nephropathy)
- acquired nephrogenic diabetes insipidus → resulting in polyuria and polydipsia.
SAQ. A 28 years old male came with repeated weakness of all four limbs. You reviewed his investigation profile for the last 1 year and found that there is persistent hypokalemia. How will you clinically evaluate and investigate this patient to reach the diagnosis?
Recurrent and/or Persistent hypokalemia: D/D
- Drug induced: Diuretics, Corticosteroids, beta agonist, laxative abuse,
- Conn syndrome
- Cushing’s Syndrome
- Renal artery stenosis
- Renal tubular acidosis – eg Sjogren syndrome, Wilson disease etc
- Persistent diarrhea, vomiting
- Intestinal fistula
- Liddle’s syndrome
- Gietleman’s syndrome
- Hypokalemic periodic paralysis
Clinical Evaluation
- medications (e.g., laxatives, diuretics, antibiotics),
- diet and dietary habits (e.g., licorice)
- symptoms that suggest a particular cause (e.g., periodic weakness, diarrhea).
History | Examination | Possible diagnosis |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investigation
Initial:
- electrolytes, BUN, creatinine,
- serum osmolality,
- Mg2+, Ca2+,
- complete blood count, and
- urinary pH, osmolality, creatinine, electrolytes
- Urinary calcium
- TSH, FT4
Investigation | Finding |
|
|
|
|
|
Renin
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
To identify the underlying cause | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Patients with Liddle’s syndrome classically manifest severe hypertension with hypokalemia, unresponsive to spironolactone yet sensitive to amiloride.
Management
The goals of therapy in hypokalemia are to prevent life-threatening and/or serious chronic consequences, to replace the associated K+ deficit, and to correct the underlying cause and/or mitigate future hypokalemia
- Treatment of the cause, if possible.
- If the problem is redistribution of potassium into cells, reversal of the process.
- correction of alkalosis, stop beta agonist etc
- Potassium replacement:
-
- slow-release potassium chloride tablets
- acute condition:
-
- IV potassium chloride.
- The rate of administration depends on the severity of hypokalaemia; presence of cardiac or neuromuscular complications.
- generally not exceed 10 mmol of potassium per hour.
- with severe, life-threatening hypokalemia, infusion rates up to 20 mmol/hr with continuous cardiac monitoring.
- In presence of metabolic acidosis:
-
- alkaline salts of potassium (potassium bicarbonate) orally.
- If hypomagnesemia:
-
- replacement of magnesium
- Potassium-sparing diuretics, such as amiloride: correction of hypokalemia, hypomagnesaemia and metabolic alkalosis, especially when renal loss of potassium is the underlying cause.
- Frequent plasma potassium monitoring to avoid hyperkalemia