Muhammad Ahmad Khan , Waqar Ali , Umar Maqbool , Wajeeha Aslam , Muhammad Danial Malik , Muhammad Waleed Khan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Severe hyperkalemia is a life-threatening complication of kidney disease in acute or chronic states. Hyperkalemia-induced muscle paralysis is a manifestation of severe hyperkalemia, usually seen when serum potassium levels rise above 6.5 mEq/L, along with cardiac arrhythmia requiring emergency management.
Case report
A 60-year-old Asian male presented in the medical emergency with paraparesis for 6 hours. On examination, he had flaccid paraparesis without any sensory loss. His ECG showed changes of hyperkalemia, and his potassium levels came out to be 8.1 mEq/L. The weakness resolved following the correction of hyperkalemia with a regimen containing an insulin-dextrose infusion and salbutamol nebulizations.
Conclusion
Although rare, severe hyperkalemia is a cause of periodic paralysis, especially in patients with risk factors such as end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Prompt treatment of hyperkalemia can resolve paralysis even before hemodialysis. The report aims to educate physicians about an essential differential of flaccid paralysis.
Lucas Delfino Lampugnani, C. Winter, Murilo Robusto Baldissera, Giovanni Luis Brocco, Thiago Vallone De Arruda Oliveira, Isabela Fialho Vitti, C. L. Lopes, Ana Beatriz Souza Piña, Matheus Fontes Moreira Conceição, Murilo Henrique Da Silva Pinheiro