Title: Diagnosis and Management of Common Electrolyte Disorders
1Diagnosis and Management of Common Electrolyte
Disorders
- Eric I. Rosenberg, MD, MSPH, FACP
Rev 11/06 electrolytes1106
2Objectives
- To discuss diagnostic and therapeutic
strategies for - Hyponatremia
- Hypernatremia
- Hyperkalemia
- Hypokalemia
3Case 1
- 60 year old man
- Admit for weakness and hyponatremia
- Na 120 mg/dL
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5Clinical Evaluation
- History
- Symptomatic?
- Predisposed?
- Medications? IVFs?
- Physical
- Volume status?
- Labs
- Confirm (if unusually abnormal)
- Context
- Additional diagnostic tests
6Case 1 (contd)
- Nausea, weak, confused x 1 week
- HTN, CHF
- JVD, crackles (rales), edema
- Na 120 mEq/L
- BUN 93 mg/dL
- Cr 3 mg/dL
- Glucose 135 mg/dL
- Albumin 2.9 mg/dL
- Plasma osm 252 mOsm/kg
- Urine osm 690 mOsm/kg
7Choose the most appropriate treatment
- 3 I.V. NaCl
- 0.9 I.V. NaCl
- 50 mg hydrochlorothiazide daily
- Salt and water restriction
- Demeclocycline
8Differential diagnosis
9Hyponatremia usually reflects excessive H20
10Common Differential Dx
- Decreased Water Excretion
- GFR
- Kidney perfusion
- SIADH
- Addisons Disease
- Malnutrition
- Pseudohyponatremia
- Psychogenic (gt1 L / hour)
100mg/dL glucose increase ? 1.6 mEq/L Na
decrease
Urine specific gravity lt 1.003
11COMMON CAUSES of HYPONATREMIA
- History predisposing features
- Exam volume status (including orthostatics
supine/standing) - BMP Urinalysis Serum Osmolality (Urine Sodium
Urine Osmolality) - Head C.T. (if symptomatic)
- Other imaging/labs to evaluate CV, Renal,
Endocrine systems as needed
12Complications of Treating Hyponatremia
- Delayed treatment
- Cerebral edema
- Permanent neurological injury
- Death
- Inappropriately rapid treatment
- Cerebral dehydration/demyelination
- Permanent neurological injury
- Death
- Inappropriate treatment
- Failure to improve ? morbidity
- Delayed improvement ? morbidity
- Further deterioration
13Common Treatment Options
- Water restriction
- Diuresis (with loop diuretic)
- Volume infusion (with crystalloid)
- Hypertonic saline
- Demeclocycline
14What if he had cerebral edema?
- Correct Na to 125-130mEq/L to temporarily
relieve edema - Na should NOT increase by more than 10-12
mEq/L in 1st 24 hours - Slow/Stop infusion as soon as symptoms improve
153 NaCl Calculation
- Na 116 mEq/L
- Goal Na 125 mEq/L at 24 hours
- Amount of Na to be given as 3 infusion
- Serum Na (desired) Serum Na(measured)
(TBW) - 125 116 (0.5)(60kg)
- 270 mEq Na
- 3 saline 513 mEq sodium/L
- 270/513 0.5 L 500 ml over 24 hrs.
16Hyponatremia Key Points
- 127 mEq/L
- Excess water
- If symptomatic, treat rapidly
- Slowly correct Na towards normal
- Find the underlying cause
17Case 2
- 40 y/o woman s/p hypertensive brain hemorrhage 2
weeks ago. - This morning shes less responsive.
- What may have caused this new problem?
18- Stuporous
- BP 150/70, HR 94
- Dry mouth, poor turgor
- Na 160 mEq/L K 2.8 mEq/L HCO3 18 mEq/L Cl 137
mEq/L
19Differential diagnosis
20Hypernatremia usually reflects insufficient H20
21Differential Diagnosis
- Lack of water
- Severe diarrhea
- Severe burns
- H20 excretion
- Osmotic diuresis
- H20 conservation
- Diabetes insipidus
22Guidelines for Hypernatremia Rx
- Determine and treat likely cause(s)
- Most common error is underguesstimation of
water deficit - TBW x (Na(measured) Na(desired) )/Na
(desired) - Replace H20 enterally if possible
- Frequent monitoring
23Sodium Content of IVFs (mEq/L)
- 3 saline 513
- 0.9 (normal) saline 154
- Ringers Lactate 130
- Half Normal (0.45) saline 77
- 5 Dextrose (D5W) 0
24Hypernatremia Key Points
- Na gt145 mEq/L
- Net water loss
- Calculate the water deficit
25Case 3
- 29 y/o man with severe muscle weakness.
- No vomiting or diarrhea.
- Normal physical exam.
26- Na 141 mEq/L
- K 1.4 mEq/L
- Cl 116 mEq/L
- HCO3- 11 mEq/L
- pH 7.25, pCO2 21 mmHg
27Consequences of Hypokalemia K lt3
- Neuromuscular manifestations
- Weakness, fatigue, rhabdomyolysis, myonecrosis,
respiratory failure - GI symptoms
- Constipation, ileus
- Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus
- Dysrhythmias (if heart disease)
28Common Causes of Hypokalemia
- Malnutrition/NPO
- Diarrhea (100 mEq/L)
- Vomiting (volume depletion)
- DRUGS
- Thiazides (stimulate excretion)
- Amphotericin B
- Penicillins
- Gentamicin
- Foscarnet
29Choose the most likely diagnosis
- Bartters syndrome
- Laxative abuse
- Primary aldosteronism
- Diuretic abuse
- Distal renal tubular acidosis
30Less Common Causes
- Hormonal
- Primary hyperaldosteronism
- Adenomas, hyperplasia, ectopic ACTH, ectopic
mineralocorticoid (licorice, chaw) - Secondary hyperaldosteronism
- Renal hypoperfusion (CHF, RAS, severe HTN)
- Renin-secreting tumor
- Renal tubular disease
- Type 1 or 2 RTA
- Bartters syndrome (metabolic alkalosis,
polyuria) - Chronic magnesium depletion
- Laxative abuse (metabolic alkalosis)
31Hypokalemia Rx
- Recognize likely total body depletion
- 1 mEq/L decrease 150-400mEq total deficiency
- Gradual oral replacement
- I.V. replacement if serum level less than 3 mEq/L
- Check Replace magnesium
- Consider telemetry
32Hypokalemia Key Points
- K lt 3.5 review medications, review health
status - K lt 3 intervention
- Recognize Mg is cofactor
- Renal/CV monitoring
33Case 4
- 59 y/o man with 3-days malaise, decreased mental
acuity and responsiveness, slurred speech. - ESRD on hemodialysis HTN, DM, Hypothyroidism
34- Disoriented and lethargic
- BP (supine) 148/79mmHg, HR 101/min (supine) RR
26/min, T 37.7oC. - Mucous membranes are moist, neck veins are
distended. Bilateral crackles and wheezes. Loud
S4. 3 peripheral edema.
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37- What is the next most appropriate step in
managing this patient? - Begin I.V. infusion of normal saline for volume
repletion - Administer 1 ampule dextrose and 10 units insulin
I.V. for hyperkalemia - Transfer to the ICU and perform emergent
peritoneal dialysis - Transfer to the ICU and perform emergent
hemodialysis
38Dialysis machine available in 20 minutes
39Emergency Treatment K gt 6 mEq/L
- STAT ECG
- STAT repeat K
- Give IV Calcium
40Additional Rx
- More IV Calcium
- Glucose and Insulin
- Bicarbonate
- Inhaled Beta-2 agonists
- Sodium polystyrene sulfonate (Kayexalate)
41Severe hyperkalemia is usually preceded by
moderate, uncorrected hyperkalemia
42Differential Dx
- Renal Failure (GFR lt 10 ml/min)
- Extra Renal Causes
- Metabolic acidosis
- Cell lysis (chemotherapy, trauma)
- Salt substitutes, ACE-I/ARB,
- Addisons Disease
- Pseudo (coagulated RBCs/platelets)
43Hyperkalemia Key Points
- Kgt4.5 caution with medications, monitor
- Kgt5.5 intervene
- Calcium (not kayexalate) is 1st line
- Check ECG
44SUMMARY
- Construct your differential
- Know the complications of therapy
- Know the implications of lack of therapy
- Calculate water/electrolyte needs
- But repeated and frequent monitoring is most
important. - Electrolyte disorders may be a diagnostic clue or
an expected consequence of therapy