Potassium Flashcards

1
Q

Potassium (K+)

A
  • major intracellular cation,
  • In cells and RBC average concentration is 150mmol/L and 105mmol/L respectively
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2
Q

Increased intracellular K+ are maintained by:

A
  • Na+ and K+ (atp) pump
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3
Q

What happens to K+ ions when pump activity decreases

A
  • K+ diffuse out of the cell into the ECF and plasma
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4
Q

Excess potassium is excreted by which organ

A
  • kidneys
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5
Q

What hormone is responsible for excretion and reabsorption of K+ in exchange for Na+

A
  • aldosterone
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6
Q

Specimen requirements for K+ determination

A
  1. Serum or plasma must be collected with minimal hemolysis to avoid contamination from RBC intracellular K
  2. Whole blood samples should be kept at 4 degrees b4 separation
  3. Severe leukocytes
  4. Skeletal muscle activity causes K+ efflux from muscle cells into plasma causing potassium level elevation
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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
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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
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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
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10
Q

Determination of Na+ and K+

A
  1. Flame emission spectrophometry
  2. Spectrophometry essays
  3. Ion selective electrodes
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11
Q

Flame emission spectrophometry principle

A
  1. Samples are diluted in a diluent containing known amounts of Lithium or cesium and are aspirated into a propane air flame
  2. Li and Cs ions when excited they emit spectra with sharp bright lines at 671 and 852 nm respectively
  3. Lights emitted from the excited ions is directed through separate photo detectors
  4. The Li+ or Cs+ emission signal is used as an internal standard against which the Na+ and K+ signals are compared
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12
Q

categories of Spectrophometric methods

A
  1. Based on enzyme activation
  2. Kinetic Spectrophometric essays
  3. Those that detect the spectral shift produced when Na+bor K+ binds to a macrocyclic chromophore
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13
Q

Kinetic Spectrophometric essays are based on what?

A
  1. Activation of the enzyme B-galactosidase by Na+
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14
Q

What does the enzyme B-galactosidase hydrolyze?

A
  1. O-nitrophenol-B-d_galactosidase
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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
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