Potassium Flashcards

1
Q

normal plasma K

A

3.5-5

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2
Q

handling of an acute K load vs acute K deprivation

A

handling of acute K load is quick: 75% of K load is taken up acutely into cells very quickly, followed by relatively reapid incr in renal K excretion (urinary K excretion can exceed filtered K load due to tubular K secretion); handling of K deprivation is slow (days to weeks) and therefore substantial K defecit can occur in meantime, also kidney cannot decr K excretion to the same level it decr Na excretion (minmum urine K is 5-15 mEq)

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3
Q

total body K vs plasma K

A

reduced TBK doesn’t affect plasma K as much as increased TBK does b/c cells can release K if plasma is deficient (but can’t take up K as easily); thus, if plasma is hypokalemic than the body must be severely TBK deprived

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4
Q

hormones that affect K

A

insulin, catecholamines, and aldosterone all send K into cells by incr Na/K pump activity (aldosterone also causes K excretion in kidney) and can be used to tx hyperkalemia and/or can cause side effects of hypokalemia (i.e. beta agonist side effect = hypokalemia)

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5
Q

factors affecting internal K balance (6)

A

plasma K concentration (high K stims Na/K pump and thus sends K into cells, high K in plasma also incr concen gradient for K to enter cells); hormones (insulin, catecholamines, aldo all send K into cells); exercise (K release from muscle); plasma tonicity (hypertonicity shrinks cells, thus incr. K concentration and creating a large concentration gradient for K to leave cells, also K leaves w/ water via solvent drag); acid-base balance (acidemia = hyperkalemia as H+ enters cells in return for K); cell lysis (rhabdomyolysis, hemolysis dump K into plasma)

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6
Q

hypertonicity effects on K balance (3)

A

hypertonicity shrinks cells, thus incr. K concentration and creating a large concentration gradient for K to leave cells, also K leaves w/ water via solvent drag –> hyperkalemia (incr by 1 mEq for each 20 mOsm incr) - most often seen w/ acute hyperglycemia (further impacted by lack of insulin in T1DM to send K back into cells)

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7
Q

glucose load effects on K in normals and diabetics

A

normal: glucose load induces insulin -> hypokalemia; diabetic: glucose load causes hypertonicity -> hyperkalemia

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8
Q

diabetics and K

A

glucose load in diabetes causes hyperkalemia b/c hypertonicity sends K out of cells and b/c insulin can’t send it back inside; however, kidneys in DKA tend to excrete K b/c ketoanions reach distal tubule and incr K excretion (more neg lumen) and b/c osmotic diuresis (glucose, ketones) -> may cause hypokalemia, particularly after hyperglycemia corrected w/ insulin; overall, diabetics have TBK deficit (loss in urine) but hyperkalemia in plasma (insulin lack, hypertonicity)

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9
Q

organic vs inorganic acidosis and K balance

A

organic acidosis (lactic acidosis, alcoholic ketosis, DKA) causes less hyperkalemia than inorganic acidosis (HCl, H2SO4, H3PO4), perhaps b/c organic acids enter cell as anion w/ H+ and thus K+ doesn’t need to leave

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10
Q

K reabsorption throughout kidney (%s)

A

prox nephron not regulated: 80% in PT, 10% in TAL; collecting duct regulated: in hyperkalemia, 20-180% can be secreted in initial collecting duct (20-40% will be reabsorbed again in CD despite hyperkalemia) -> total 10-150% filtered load excreted, vs. in hypokalemia, 2% will be reabsorbed in initial CD w/ 6% reabs in late CD -> total 2% filtered load excreted

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11
Q

K handling in PT (3)

A

in early prox tubule, reabs paracellularly due to solvent drag; in late tubule, small positive lumen V drives K reabs paracellularly; there is minimal secretion to lumen through luminal K channels

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12
Q

K handling in loop of Henle: thin descending limb, thin ascending limb, TAL

A

K passively secreted in thin descending limb (driven by high K permeability and high medullary K concentration); K passively reabs in thin ascending limb (this traps K in medullary interstitium -> incr capacity to secr K in distal tubule and CD during hyperkalemia); TAL reabs K both actively (accounts for 50%, via NK2Cl) and passively (accounts for 50%, due to positive lumen), some reabs K is secreted back into lumen through ROMPK while some exits the cell basolaterally

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13
Q

reabs and secretion of K in CD - what cells/channels are responsible?

A

principal cells secr K through aldo-sensitive channels and thru apical K-Cl synporter (driven by concentration gradient maintained by fast urine flow and by neg lumen V est by ENAC Na reabs); alpha IC cells reabs K through HK antiporter channels

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14
Q

reqs for K secretion into CD (3, lab values to get K secr)

A

aldo; Na delivery to CD (Na reabs through ENAC makes lumen negative and drives K secretion - need urine Na > 10-20 mEq/L to get K secretion); high urine flow rate (maintains concen. gradient; need urine V > 300-500 mL/day to get K secretion)

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15
Q

factors affecting distal nephron K secretion (4)

A

incr plasma K -> incr K excretion (independent of aldo); aldo -> incr K secretion; incr distal tubule Na delivery (-> neg lumen) and incr flow (maintain K concen gradient) -> incr K secretion; anions in tubular fluid (if NaCl delivered to tubule, Cl- absorbed relatively easily and tubule doesn’t get negative; if Na-sulfate delivered, sulfate is not as permeable as Cl- and thus is left behind -> more negative lumen = more K secr – we see this clinically w/ ketoanions, HCO3-, and anionic meds like penicillin)

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16
Q

non-reabsorbable anions: what do they do, what are they (4)

A

if NaCl delivered to tubule, Cl- absorbed relatively easily and tubule doesn’t get negative; if Na-sulfate delivered, sulfate is not as permeable as Cl- and thus is left behind -> more negative lumen = more K secr; we see this clinically w/ ketoanions, HCO3- (metabolic alkalosis kidney compensation, prox RTA), and anionic meds like penicillin or hippopurate (toluene, glue sniffing)

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17
Q

why doesn’t hypovolemia lead to hypokalemia via aldo?

A

hypovolemia -> RAAS -> AgII -> NaH in PT upregulated -> avid PT Na reabsorption -> low distal Na delivery -> no K secretion despite high aldo levels

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18
Q

hyperkalemia consequences (7)

A

cell swelling; cell alkalosis (K enters cells in exchange for H+); plasma acidosis (decr renal ammoniagenesis -> impaired urinary acidication); cell depolarization; muscle weakness and paralysis (initially incr muscle excitability followed by Na channel inactivation) which can lead to respiratory muscle failure; vasodilation (SMC relaxation); cardiac conduction disturbances and ventricular arrhythmias

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19
Q

hyperkalemia ECG

A

peaked T waves -> long PR w/ flattened p -> QRS wide -> sine wave (VF)

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20
Q

pseudohyperkalemia (4)

A

in vitro hemolysis assoc w/ leukocytosis (serum K high, plasma K normal), thrombocytosis (serum K high, plasma K normal), fist clenching during blood draw (exercise), fragile RBC in genetic disorders (hereditary spherocytosis)

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21
Q

dietary potassium (4)

A

potatoes, bananas, oranges, tomatoes

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22
Q

causes of hyperkalemia: 3 general classes w/ specifics

A

high K intake (us. needs impaired K excretion or internal K balance probs to cause hyperkalemia tho); impaired K excretion due to low GFR (AKI/CKD), RAAS probs (hypoaldo in Addison’s, type IV RTA, and meds; aldo resistance due to meds or tubulointerstitial CKD), inadeq distal tubule Na delivery and urine flow; abnormal internal balance due to insulin deficiency, hypertonicity, metabolic acidosis, drugs (beta antagonists, severe digoxin toxicity, succinylcholine), exercise, tissue damage/cell lysis

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23
Q

AKI effects on K balance (4)

A

causes hyperkalemia: decr distal Na delivery and urine flow; distal tubule dysfn prevents K secretion; tissue breakdown/catabolic state/metabolic acidosis lead to hyperkalemia; no adapative mechs to incr K secr in distal tubule and colon

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24
Q

CKD effects on K balance

A

can cause hyperkalemia, but only if GFR severely depressed (<15-20) b/c compensation occurs (distal nephron hypertrophy w/ incr. principle cell area, incr NK pump activity, and incr apical K channel activity; colon K secr incr.)

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25
Q

Addison’s: what is it, sx (4), dx (4), tx (2)

A

primary adrenal insufficiency: no aldo (hyponatremia in 90%, hyperkalemia in 65%, hypovolemia), no cortisol (fatigue, anorexia, weight loss); expect low aldo, low cortisol (blunted response to cosyntropin), high renin; tx w/ glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid (fludrocortisone) - cortisol will help incr K excr by incr GFR and tubular flow

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26
Q

type IV RTA: aka (3), assoc w/ (5), pathogenesis (4), how does acidemia occur?

A

aka hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism or hyperkalemic distal RTA or hyperkalemia hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis; most pts have both CKD and DM while some have chronic interstitial nephritis, SLE, and HIV; due to decr renin synthesis (80% pts), adrenal dysfn (decr aldo even w/ AgII administration, even though cortisol production is normal), V expansion (due to impaired GFR in CKD -> suppresses RAAS), decr renal response to aldo; decr aldo -> impaired distal tubule Na reabs and reduced NH4 synthesis (b/c hyperkalemia b/c no K secr) -> acidosis (decr H secr b/c no aldo, hyperkalemia, reduced ammonium synthesis)

27
Q

hypokalemia in distal and proximal RTA due to (4)

A

variable K concentration (us a bit low) due to: mild hyperaldosteronism b/c Na lost w/ HCO3; incr distal nephron delivery of Na and HCO3 (poorly reabsorbable anion) stims K secr in CD; defect in HK ATPase in some distal RTAs (less K reabs); incr membrane K permeability in dRTA assoc. w/ amphotericin B

28
Q

hyperkalemia and NH4 synthesis

A

hyperK causes reduced ammoniagenesis: hyperkalemia sends H+ out of cells in exchange for K+ into cells; cell perceives an alkaline intracellular environment and so wants to conserve acid and thus doesn’t generate ammonia for excretion –> thus, hyperkalemia causes acidemia by preventing bicarb production/ammonia excretion

29
Q

vomiting effects on K balance

A

hypokalemia: Na lost in urine as NaHCO3 leads to hypovolemia -> hyperaldo -> K excretion in urine

30
Q

what causes hypoaldosteronism? (3 classes)

A

Addison’s, meds (cyclosproine/tacrolimus, NSAIDs, B antagonists, ACEI/ARB, heparin), type IV RTA (decr renin synthesis, adrenal dysfn where aldo decr w/o cortisol decr, V expansion in CKD -> suppress RAAS)

31
Q

meds that cause hyperkalemia (16)

A

hypoaldo caused by: cyclosproine/tacrolimus, NSAIDs, B antagonists, ACEI/ARB, heparin; decr aldo response: K sparing diuretics (triamerane/amiloride block ENaC, sprionolactone/eplerenone block aldo receptor), trimethorpim (antibx) and pentamide (anti P. carinii) block ENaC; abnormal internal K balance: beta antagonists, severe digoxin toxicity, succinylcholine

32
Q

pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1: aka, mutation (2), renin/aldo levels, sx (4)

A

salt-wasting disorder of neonatal period; LOF mutation of ENac (AR) or aldo receptor (AD, sporadic); high renin and aldo (high aldo but low aldo effects due to receptor mutation) w/ severe Na wasting, hyperkalemia, V depletion, metabolic acidosis (sx of hypoaldosteronism)

33
Q

pseudohypoaldosteronism type 2: aka (2), mutation (2), pathogenesis, renin/aldo levels, sx (2)

A

aka Gordons’ syndrome aka familial hyperkalemic hypertension (AD); incr. DCT NaCl transporter activity (due to WNK1/4 mutation) causes decr distal Na delivery and flow -> decr K secr -> hyperkalemia; normal GFR, low renin, low-normal aldo; sx: hypertension, hyperkalemia

34
Q

TTKG: when to use, equation, values (3)

A

used as rough assessment of K secr in CD; transtubular K gradient = (Uk/Pk)/(Uosm/Posm); normally 7-10 (if low, then low K secr = hypoaldo or aldo resistance, if high, then high K secr = hyperaldo or hyperkalemia not due to hypoaldo); Uosm/Posm corrects for water reabs in CD that can impact Uk concentration

35
Q

tx of severe acute hyperkalemia (3)

A
  1. antagonize cardiac effects w/ calcium gluconate (stabilizes membrane by incr threshold and incr # of Na channels, works w/in mins); 2. K redistribution into cells w/ insulin + glucose or w/ beta-2 agonist (albuterol -> avoid in pts w/ CHD) or w/ sodium bicarb (ineffective unless in setting of severe acidosis, may cause hypertonicity -> hyperkalemia worse); 3. K excretion w/ loop diuretics, Kayexalate (oral or enema), dialysis if v. severe
36
Q

management of chronic hyperkalemic (6)

A

reduce intake, review meds, incr Na intake (NaCl, NaHCO3), loop diuretics, Kayexalate (oral or enema), fludrocortisone

37
Q

causes of renal K wasting (7)

A

need both aldo and Na delivery: 1. diuretics or diuretic-like disease (Barrter’s/Gitelman’s) -> decr V (aldo incr) and block prox Na reabs (incr distal Na delivery); 2. vomiting -> decr V (causes incr aldo), incr NaHCO3 delivery to distal tubule (kidney attempting to fix alkalosis); 3. posthypercapneic alkalosis -> incr NaHCO3 delivery to fix alkalosis, this incr NaHCO3 loss means decr V (aldo incr); 4. primary hyperaldosteronism or apparent MC excess or glucocorticoid-remediable hyperaldo or hyperreninism or Liddle’s or CAH-> Na delivery incr b/c high ECF V therefore downregulation of proximal tubule Na reabs; 5. RTA -> incr Na in tubule due to RTA dysfn, incr aldo due to decr V due to Na wasting; 6. Hypomagnesemia -> Mg normally prevents K efflux thru ROMPK; 7. incr # non-reabsorbable anions in distal tubule (HCO3, ketones, penicillin, hippurate) -> distal lumen more negative -> K efflux

38
Q

causes of hypokalemia (7 categories)

A

renal K loss: all diuretics, Bartter’s/Gitelman’s, vomiting, posthypercapneic alkalosis, RTA, hypomagnesemia, primary hyperaldo (or like it: apparent mineralocorticoid excess, CAH, hyperreninism, glucocorticoid-remediable hyperaldo, Liddles), incr # non-reabsorbable anions in distal tubule; incr K loss in stool (i.e. diarrhea); extreme sweat (K loss in sweat, also V loss -> hyperaldo); redistribution into ICF (only causes transient hypokalemia) due to drugs (beta 2 agonists and insulin) or alkalosis, rapid cell growth; inadeq. intake (rare, us. only modest hypokalemia unless assoc. renal excretion defect) due to “tea and toast” diet, anorexia, or alcoholism

39
Q

diagnostic eval of hypokalemia

A

exclude transcellular shifts (transient hypoK), then measure Uk. If Uk < 20 mEq/day, then hypoK due to extrarenal loss (diarrhea, sweat). If Uk > 20/day, then hypoK due to renal losses. If normal BP, then look at serum bicarb. If serum bicarb low, then RTA. If serum bicarb high, then alkalosis. Look at urine Cl - if low (s, or CAH.

40
Q

diseases like primary hyperaldosterinism (5)

A

apparent mineralocorticoid excess (cortisol can activate MR), CAH, hyperrenism (renal artery stenosis, renin-secr tumor, malignant HTN), Liddles (ENaC const. active), glucocorticoid-remediable hyperaldo (aldo responds to ACTH)

41
Q

meds that cause hypokalemia (8)

A

cause redistribution into ICF: beta agonists, insulin; cause renal K loss: all diuretics other than K sparing diuretics; assoc w/ hypomagnesemia: diuretics, aminoglycosies, cisplantium, foscarnet, amphotericin B, alcohol

42
Q

meds that cause hypomagnesemia (6)

A

diuretics, aminoglycosies, cisplantium, foscarnet, cyclosporine, amphotericin B, alcohol

43
Q

causes of decr K intake (3)

A

tea and toast diet, anorexia, alcoholism (may cause hypokalemia due to decr K intake and due to magnesium depletion); however doesn’t us. cause hypokalemia b/c tissue breakdown releases K into ECF

44
Q

causes of K shifts that lead to hypokalemia (6)

A

drugs: beta agonists (or endogeneous catecholamines), insulin (only drugs, not in insulinomas for some reason); alkalosis (altho hypoK in alkalosis is due to renal K wasting, not internal K shift); rapid cell growth (folic acid or B12 for megaloblastic anemia, parental hyperalimentation, granulocyte-macrophage colony stim factor for neutropenia); myeloid leukemia (pseudohypokalemia -> cells take up K from serum after blood draw); hypokalemic periodic paralysis

45
Q

diarrhea presentation (3)

A

metabolic acidosis w/ normal urinary acidification and hypokalemia

46
Q

causes of incr stool K loss (6)

A

diarrhea of any etiology; laxatives; villous adenoma (rare colonic tumor that secretes K); ureterosigmoidstomy (sigmoid colon changed into bladder, where it acts to secrete K and abs NaCl); Kayexelate; geophagia (ingestion of clay -> binds K)

47
Q

sodium polystyrene sulfonate

A

Kayexelate -> resin binds K to facilitate excretion in GI tract

48
Q

magnesium and K

A

magnesium depletion causes K wasting b/c Mg normally binds ROMPK preventing K efflux in TAL, w/o Mg K can leave cell -> tubule

49
Q

pseudohypokalemia

A

myeloid leukemia -> cells takes up K from serum after blood draw

50
Q

diuretics effect on K (4 classes and their effects)

A

loop/thiazide diuretic cause V depletion (-> aldo) and incr distal Na delivery (inhibit TAL/DCT Na reabs) -> incr K secretion -> hypokalemia, also cause alkalosis -> hypokalemia, thiazide are more kaliuretic b/c they have longer DOA and thus less likely to have K conserving time periods; acetazolamide causes V depletion (-> aldo) and incr distal Na delivery (w/ NaHCO3) and poorly resorbable anion (HCO3-) delivery -> hypokalemia; osmotic diuretics cause V depletion and incr distal NaCl delivery -> hypokalemia

51
Q

primary hyperaldosteronism: sx (2, %), cause (2), dx

A

causes moderate to severe HTN (accounts for 1-2% of HTN pts); 60% due to adenoma, 40% due to bilateral adrenal hyperplasia; serum K may be normal in 40% pts (more commonly normal in bilateral adrenal hyperplasia) but rest have hypokalemia; dx w/ aldo/renin ratio (if > 20, then probably primary hyperaldo b/c aldo is high but renin is low due to neg feedback)

52
Q

apparent mineralocorticoid excess

A

normally, cortisol is degraded in kidney by 11-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase-2; if this enzyme is deficient then cortisol can bind to MR and give sx of hyperaldo w/ low renin and aldo levels; enzyme can be mutated (causes severe juvenile HTN w/ hypokalemia and met. alkalosis), inhibited by licorice, or overwhelmed by high cortisol levels in Cushing’s due to ectopic ACTH

53
Q

CAH

A

congenital adrenal hyperplasia can lead to excessive MC effect -> HTN, hypokalemia, alkalosis

54
Q

hyperrenism etiologies (3)

A

renal artery stenosis, malignant HTN, renin-secreting tumors

55
Q

glucocorticoid-remediable hyperaldosteronism

A

mutation combines cortisol enzyme and aldo enzyme, so that aldo synthesis is stimmed by ACTH and occurs in the zona fasciculata (normally cortisol producing tissue); administration of cortisol will shut off ACTH and decr aldo production; AD trait w/ HTN before 21 yo, hypoK in 50%, incr risk of hemorrhagic stroke (prob due to congenital HTN during cerebrovascular dev)

56
Q

LIddle’s syndrome

A

AD disorder w/ early-onset HTN and hypokalemia but low renin and aldo; due to mutations in ENaC leading to constitutive activation; tx w/ amiloride but not spironolactone

57
Q

amiloride

A

anti-ENaC

58
Q

sprinonolactone

A

anti-MR receptor

59
Q

Bartters vs Gitelman’s mutations

A

Think LAB TAG (loop barterrs thiazide gitelmans): Bartters in TAL -> NK3CL, CIC-Kb (basolateral Cl channel), ROMPK (apical K channel); Gitelman’s in DCT -> NaCl transporter

60
Q

Barrters and Gitelman’s labs (6)

A

urinary Na wasting -> urinary K wasting, V depletion -> secondary hyperaldo and hyperrenin -> metabolic alkalosis; Barterr’s is hypercalcuiric (loss of positive lumen in TAL that allows Ca reabs) and can have nephrocalcinosis; Gitleman’s is hypocalcuric (enhanced reabs in DCT due to impaired transport of NaCl -> hyperpolarization)

61
Q

hypokalemia on EKG

A

ST depression and T flattening, prominent U wave (after T)

62
Q

hypokalemia consequences: cardiac (1), neuromuscular (4), endocrine (4), renal (5)

A

cardiac: ventricular arrhythmias (incr risk for digitalis toxicity); neuromuscular: constipation, weakness, paralysis (us. peripheral but not respiratory muscles), rhabdomyolysis; endocrine: decr aldo, incr renin (b/c decr RBF, altho Na retention counteracts), incr renal prostaglanin synthesis, decr insulin (mild glucose intolerance -> worsens hyperglycemia in diabetics); renal: polyuria and polydipsia (nephrogenic DI due to downregulation of aquaporin-2), incr ammoniagenesis (can lead to hepatic coma in pts w/ decr liver fn that can’t break down ammonia), met. alkalosis, Na retention (-> HTN), chronic interstitial nephritis

63
Q

hypokalemia tx

A

tx not emergency unless arrhythmias or profound weakness; prefer to use oral K to minimize hyperK risk: high K foods in mild hypokalemia, oral K preps in moderate hypoK; if rapid correction needed, use KCl (esp in metabolic alkalosis) or K citrate/K acetate if metabolic acidosis (diarrhea, RTA) – avoid IV K unless absolutely neccesary, and check K often!