Acta clinica Croatica, Vol. 40 No. 3, 2001.
Case report
Hyperkalemia: A Potentially Lethal Clinical Condition
Petar Kes
Abstract
Hyperkalemia develops when the regulation between potassium intake and potassium excretion, or the distribution between intra- and extracellular potassium is disturbed. It is a common, silent, and potentially lethal clinical condition, which seldom occurs in patients with normal renal function. Clinically, the most important effect of hyperkalemia is that which the condition has on the myocardium, but it also affects neuromuscular, gastrointestinal, and hormonal functioning. The management of hyperkalemia requires exclusion of pseudohyperkalemia, assessment of the urgency for treatment, and institution of appropriate therapy. The initial treatment for life-threatening hyperkalemia should always include insulin plus glucose, as the hypokalemic response to insulin is both prompt and predictable. Combined treatment with b2-agonists and insulin is also effective, but the most rapid method of potassium removal is hemodialysis.
Keywords
Hyperkalemia, physiopathology; Hyperkalemia, therapy; Kidney, physiopathology
Hrčak ID:
14873
URI
Publication date:
3.9.2001.
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