Potassium Balance Flashcards

1
Q

Regulation of K+ homeostasis?

A
  1. Cellular shifts of potassium (99% intracellular)
  2. Renal K+ excretion (90%)
  3. GI K+ excretion (10%)
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2
Q

Distribution of total body K+

A

Intracellular fluid - 3500 mEq (140-150mEq/L):
1. Muscles - 2700 mEq
2. Liver - 250 mEq
3. Erythrocytes - 250 mEq
4. Bone - 300 mEq
Intracellular fluid - 70 mEq (3.5-5.5mEq/L):

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3
Q

Enter potassium (k) intracellular (3)?

A
  1. Insulin (very fast)
  2. Beta Adrenergic Agonists
  3. Alkalosis
  4. alpha Adrenergic Antagonists
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4
Q

Exit potassium (k) intracellular (3)?

A
  1. Acidosis
  2. Hyperglycemia
  3. Beta blockers
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5
Q

Hypokalemia - DDX(5)?

A
  1. PseudoHypoKalemia
  2. Cell Shift
  3. Inadequate Intake
  4. GI Loss
  5. Renal Loss
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6
Q

Hypokalemia - PseudoHypoKalemia

A

Uptake by metabolically active cells:

Acute Myeloid Leukemia with marked leukocytosis

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7
Q

Hypokalemia - Cell shift

A
  1. Alkalosis
  2. Insulin (Insolinoma, Exogenous)
  3. Beta andgrenrics (Beta mymetics)
  4. Anabolism (B12 for pernicious anemia, TPN, leukemia\lymphoma)
  5. Hypokalemic Periodic Paralysis
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8
Q

Hypokalemia - Inadequate Intake

A

Unusual as a sole casue

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9
Q

Hypokalemia - GI Loss

A

Urinary K+ < 20 mEq/L
Diarrhea - most common casue
Vomiting - Due to renal K+ loss

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10
Q

Hypokalemia - Renal Loss

A

Urinary K+ > 20 mEq/L

Coupling of Distal Sodium Delivery + HyperAldosternism

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11
Q

Hypokalemia - ECG abnormalities

A

changes are not necessarily related to the serum potassium level:

  1. ST depression
  2. decrease in the amplitude of the T wave
  3. increase in the amplitude of U waves which occur at the end of the T wave
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12
Q

Hypokalemia - TX

A
  1. Address underlying cause
  2. Chronic tx: KCl - liquid or slow K
  3. Acute tx: IV KCl (40-80 mEq/L, rate < 20/h)
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13
Q

Hyperkalemia - DDX(4)?

A
  1. PseudoHyperKalmia
  2. Excess K+ intake
  3. Cell Shift
  4. Impaired Renal excretion
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14
Q

Hyperkalemia - Cell shift

A
  1. Cell injury: Rhabdomyolysis, tumor lysis, massive hemolysis, ischemia
  2. Toxin\Drugs: Digoxin, succinycholine
  3. DKA, nonketotic hyperosmolar state
  4. Hypercalemic periodic state
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15
Q

Hyperkalemia - Impaired K+ Renal excretion

A
  1. HypoAldosteronism
  2. Primary decrease in Na+ Delivery
  3. Abnormal cortical Collecting Duct (low flow)
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