Title: Potassium
1Potassium
- Dr Anjali Acharya
- Department of Medicine
- Division of Nephrology
- Jacobi Medical Center
- Albert Einstein College of Medicine
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5Fredrick V. Osorio and Stuart L. Linus
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9Fredrick V. Osorio and Stuart L. Linus
10Fredrick V. Osorio and Stuart L. Linus
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12Fredrick V. Osorio and Stuart L. Linus
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15Fredrick V. Osorio and Stuart L. Linus
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32Calcium Metabolism
33Passive and paracellular Ca2 transport takes
place across tight junctions and is driven by the
electrochemical gradient for Ca2 (blue arrow).
Active and transcellular Ca2 transport is a
three-step process. Ca2 enters through
(hetero)tetrameric epithelial Ca2 channels, TRPV5
andTRPV6, Ca2 bound to calbindin diffuses to the
basolateral membrane. At the basolateral
membrane, Ca2 is extruded via an ATP-dependent
Ca2-ATPase (PMCA1b) and a Na/Ca2 exchanger
(NCX1). The active form of vitaminD stimulates
the individual steps of transcellular Ca2
transport by increasing the expression of the
luminal Ca2 channels, calbindins, and the
extrusion systems.
34Ion transport in loop of Henle
35- TRPV5 knockout mice display profound renal Ca2
wasting because of impaired active reabsorption
in DCT of the distal nephron - TRPV5 expression in the kidney is mainly
regulated by both PTH and 1,25(OH)2D. - Parathyroidectomy in rats is accompanied by
diminished TRPV5, calbindin-D28K, and Na/Ca2
exchanger protein abundance. - Nijmegen group clearly established the channel
TRPV5 as the rate-limiting step in active Ca2
reabsorption - They elucidated several interesting extracellular
factors that may regulate the crucial TRPV5
channel and play a role in clinical disorders of
calcium excretion
36- The anti-aging hormone Klotho regulates and
stimulates TRPV5 activity and calcium transport
via a novel mechanism - By modifying its glycosylation status?
- Also, the extracellular pH seems to act as a
dynamic switch controlling cell surface
expression of TRPV5.
37- The extracellular calcium-sensing receptor
(CaSR)-a member of the G protein-coupled receptor
- Regulates the secretion of parathyroid hormone
(PTH) and the reabsorption of tubular fluid
calcium. - Activation of the CaR by increased extracellular
Ca2 inhibits parathyroid hormone (PTH)
secretion, stimulates calcitonin secretion, and
promotes urinary Ca2 excretion - Structural abnormalities of CaSR are responsible
for different hypo- or hypercalcemic disorders - Inactivating mutations cause familial
hypocalciuric hypercalcaemia (FHH) and neonatal
severe primary hyperparathyroidism (NSPHT), and -
- Activating mutations cause autosomal dominant
hypocalcaemia (ADH)
38Calcium-Sensing Receptor
- The human CaSR gene is located on chromosome
3q13.321 - The amino acid sequence of the hCaR
- A 1078 amino-acid polypeptide
- Activates multiple G proteins including Gq/11 and
Gi, and thereby activates - different signal transduction pathways, depending
on the cell type - Activation of the CaR by increased extracellular
Ca2 leads to inhibition of PTH secretion - All GPCRs share the signature seven
transmembrane-spanning (7TM) domain - Agonist-induced GPCR activation presumably
involves conformational changes of the
membrane-spanning helices, altering the
disposition of intracellular loops and
Cterminus,and thereby promoting activation of G
proteins.
39Etiology Of Hypocalcemia
- Hyperphosphatemia
- Intravascular binding
- Hypercalciuria
- Decreased PTH secretion
- Hypovitaminosis D -poor intake or malabsorption,
decreased 25-hydroxylation of vitamin D to form
calcidiol in the liver, increased metabolism to
inactive metabolites, decreased 1-hydroxylation
of calcidiol to calcitriol in the kidney, and
decreased calcitriol action. - Magnesium depletion Mech-PTH resistance,
decreased PTH secretion - Causes-Malabsorption, chronic alcoholism,
cisplatin, parenteral fluid administration,
diuretic therapy, aminoglycosides - Sepsis or severe illness
- Chemotherapy
- Fluoride poisoning
- Bisphosphonates
- PSEUDOHYPOCALCEMIA
40Treatment of Hypocalcemia
- Symptomatic or may be asymptomatic
- Severity and the underlying cause
- The symptoms paresthesias, tetany, hypotension,
seizures, and they may have Chvostek's or
Trousseau's signs, bradycardia, impaired cardiac
contractility, and prolongation of the QT
interval.
41Treatment of Hypocalcemia
- Intravenous calcium, (1 to 2 grams of calcium
gluconate) in 10 to 20 minutes The calcium should
not be given more rapidly, because of the risk of
serious cardiac dysfunction, including systolic
arrest - followed by a slow infusion of calcium
- Hypomagnesemia
42Hypercalcemia
- Etiology
- Hyperparathyroidism Primary, Sec and tertiary
- Malignancy
- Thyrotoxicosis
- Immobilization
- Hypervitaminosis A
- Increased calcium intake
- Chronic kidney disease
- Milk alkali syndrome -hypercalcemia, metabolic
alkalosis, and renal insufficiency - Hypervitaminosis D -by increasing calcium
absorption and bone resorption exogenous or
increased endogenous production of 1,25D - Thiazide diuretics
- Rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure
- Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia -loss of fn
mutations in CaSR
43Clinical manifestations of hypercalcemia
- NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISTURBANCES -anxiety,
depression, and cognitive dysfunction , lethargy,
confusion, stupor, and coma - GASTROINTESTINAL ABNORMALITIES - constipation,
anorexia, and nausea , pancreatitis and peptic
ulcer disease - RENAL DYSFUNCTION- polyuria, nephrolithiasis, and
acute and chronic renal insufficiency - CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE -shortens the
myocardial action potential, can cause
supraventricular or ventricular arrhythmias - MUSCULOSKELETAL SYMPTOMS
44Treatment of hypercalcemia
- Acute or chronic
- Severity- serum calcium concentration gt14 mg/dL
- Isotonic saline-initial rate of 200 to 300 mL/h
that is then adjusted to maintain the urine
output at 100 to 150 mL/h. - Loop diuretic
- BISPHOSPHONATES- analogs of inorganic
pyrophosphate- inhibit calcium release by
interfering with osteoclast-mediated bone
resorption - CALCITONIN
- GLUCOCORTICOIDS
- Calcimimetics
- Dialysis
45Phosphate Metabolism
46Electrogenic NaPi-IIa couples 3 Na ions to
uphill movement of one divalent Pi per
transport cycle. One net charge is translocated.
47Phosphate
- The serum phosphate concentration is primarily a
function of the rate of renal phosphate
reabsorption - Molecular components of renal phosphate
reabsorption - The Na/Pi co-transporter family mainly consists
of three different types, but only two are
expressed in the kidney Type IIa (Na/Pi-2a) and
type IIc (Na/Pi-2c), which are almost exclusively
present in the brush border membrane of the renal
proximal tubular epithelial cells - Type III Na/Pi transporters are found in the
basolateral membrane of the renal tubules, where
they are thought to serve a function of
regulating intracellular phosphate levels - Factors affect phosphate transport by influencing
the Na/Pi co-transporter system (PTH) inhibits
the Na/Pi co-transporter system-by endocytic
retrieval of Na/Pi-2a and Na/Pi-2c proteins - Fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF-23)
phosphatonin-stimulating urinary phosphate
excretion by inhibiting the Na/Pi co-transporter
system - Dietary phosphate
- KLOTHO-(named for the Greek Fate purported to
spin the thread of life),-Klotho is essential for
endogenous FGF-23 Function. - Klotho seems to act by converting a protein
precursor of the receptor for FGF-23 into the
functional - receptor.
48HEREDITARY HYPOPHOSPHATEMIC RICKETSWITH
HYPERCALCIURIA (HHRH)
- HHRH is a primary disorder of renal Pi
reabsorption - Renal type IIa Na/Pi cotransporter (Npt2) is an
important determinant of Pi homeostasis - Growth retardation, bone deformities, renal Pi
wasting, hypophosphatemia, increased serum levels
of 1,25(OH)2D and associated hypercalciuria
49Electroneutral NaPi-IIc couples 2 Na ions to
the uphill transport of one divalent Pi. No net
charge transfer occurs
Na
Pi
- - HPO4 2 HPO4
Electrogenic NaPi-IIa couples 3 Na ions to
uphill movement of one divalent Pi per
transport cycle. One net charge is translocated.
Driven by ATP hydrolysis, the NaKATPase maintains
intracellular electronegativity by removing
accumulated Na ions in exchange for K ions.
Basolateral exit of Pi is via an unknown
pathway. Pi then diffuses into blood.
Blood