Medline ® Abstract for Reference 13
of 'Evaluation of the adult patient with hypokalemia'
13
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Excessive hypokalemia and hyperkalemia following head injury.
AU
Schaefer M, Link J, Hannemann L, Rudolph KH
SO
Intensive Care Med. 1995;21(3):235.
A sudden decrease of serum potassium below 2.5 mmol/l carries the risk of dangerous arrhythmias and requires immediate replacement therapy [6]. We refer to a patient with a brain stem compression after head injury, who developed a profound hypokalemia (K+ = 1.2 mmol/l) with life-threatening arrhythmias, probably due to a catecholamine induced intracellular potassium shift (beta-2-stimulation). Only by aggressive potassium replacement up to 80 mmol/h (610 mmol/16 h) could potassium levels be increased and cardiac arrhythmias terminated. Although replacement therapy was stopped when the serum K(+)-level increased to 2.4 mmol/l, 3.5 h later the patient became hyperkalemic (8.1 mmol/l). This was probably due to a secondary shift of potassium from intra- to extracellular space. In patients with severe head trauma and the potential risk of excessive catecholamine release special attention must be paid to changes in potassium balance.
AD
Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Universitätsklinikum Benjamin Franklin, Berlin, Germany.
PMID