Potassium Flashcards
1
Q
Potassium (K+)
A
- major intracellular cation,
- In cells and RBC average concentration is 150mmol/L and 105mmol/L respectively
2
Q
Increased intracellular K+ are maintained by:
A
- Na+ and K+ (atp) pump
3
Q
What happens to K+ ions when pump activity decreases
A
- K+ diffuse out of the cell into the ECF and plasma
4
Q
Excess potassium is excreted by which organ
A
- kidneys
5
Q
What hormone is responsible for excretion and reabsorption of K+ in exchange for Na+
A
- aldosterone
6
Q
Specimen requirements for K+ determination
A
- Serum or plasma must be collected with minimal hemolysis to avoid contamination from RBC intracellular K
- Whole blood samples should be kept at 4 degrees b4 separation
- Severe leukocytes
- Skeletal muscle activity causes K+ efflux from muscle cells into plasma causing potassium level elevation
7
Q
Why should blood samples be kept at 4 degrees Celsius b4 separation?
A
- to prevent glycolysis
- The energy-dependent Na+, K+- ATP can’t maintain the Na+/K+ gradient
8
Q
Clinical significance or conditions
A
- Hypokalemia associated with gastrointestinal loss thru vomiting, diarrhea, gastric suction, intestinal tumor, malabsorption, cancer therapy
- Renal loss through diuretics the, nephritis, renal acidosis and hyperaldosteronism
- Cellular shift due to acidosis, chemotherapy, muscle/cellular injury
- Artifactual due to sample hemolysis
9
Q
Reference intervals of potassium
A
- Serum= 3.5-5.1 mmol/L
- Plasma= males 3.5-4.5mmol/L
Females 3.4- 4.4mmol/L - Urine ( 24hr)= 25-125mmol/L
10
Q
Determination of Na+ and K+
A
- Flame emission spectrophometry
- Spectrophometry essays
- Ion selective electrodes
11
Q
Flame emission spectrophometry principle
A
- Samples are diluted in a diluent containing known amounts of Lithium or cesium and are aspirated into a propane air flame
- Li and Cs ions when excited they emit spectra with sharp bright lines at 671 and 852 nm respectively
- Lights emitted from the excited ions is directed through separate photo detectors
- The Li+ or Cs+ emission signal is used as an internal standard against which the Na+ and K+ signals are compared
12
Q
categories of Spectrophometric methods
A
- Based on enzyme activation
- Kinetic Spectrophometric essays
- Those that detect the spectral shift produced when Na+bor K+ binds to a macrocyclic chromophore
13
Q
Kinetic Spectrophometric essays are based on what?
A
- Activation of the enzyme B-galactosidase by Na+
14
Q
What does the enzyme B-galactosidase hydrolyze?
A
- O-nitrophenol-B-d_galactosidase
15
Q
ion selective electrodes
A
- ISE method uses a semipermeable membrane to develop an electric potential
produced by having different ion concentrations on either side of the membrane. - Two electrodes are used; one electrode has a constant potential, making it the
reference electrode. - The difference in potential between the reference and measuring electrodes is used
to calculate the “concentration” of the ion in solution - Analyzers fitted with ISEs usually contain Na+ electrodes with glass membranes and
K+ electrodes with liquid ion-exchange membranes that incorporate valinomycin - The change in electromotive force in a circuit between a measurement
electrode (the ISE) and a reference electrode is measured - Most blood gas analyzers are capable of measuring sodium and potassium
- Indirect ISE methods, uses diluted samples
- Direct ISE methods, uses undiluted samples
- Errors are observed due to lack of selectivity, repeated protein coating and
contamination of the membrane with competing ions