Hypokalaemia 

Normal Potassium Physiology

Distribution of Potassium

Compartment

Potassium Distribution

Intracellular

~98%

Extracellular

~2%

Normal serum potassium: 3.5 – 5.0 mEq/L

Classification of Hypokalaemia

Severity

Serum K Level

Mild

3.0 – 3.5 mEq/L

Moderate

2.5 – 3.0 mEq/L

Severe

< 2.5 mEq/L

Severe hypokalaemia is strongly associated with cardiac arrhythmias and muscle paralysis.


Causes of Hypokalaemia –

1️⃣ Reduced Intake

Cause

Mechanism

Malnutrition

Low dietary potassium intake leading to gradual total body potassium depletion

Alcoholism

Poor intake + renal and GI potassium losses

Prolonged fasting / starvation

Reduced intake + intracellular redistribution during refeeding

TPN without potassium supplementation

Absence of potassium replacement despite ongoing renal and cellular losses


2️⃣ Transcellular Shift (Redistribution) – Total Body Potassium Normal

Cause

Mechanism

Insulin therapy

Stimulates Na/K ATPase shifts potassium intracellularly

Beta-2 agonists (salbutamol, terbutaline)

Beta receptor stimulation increases cellular potassium uptake

Metabolic or respiratory alkalosis

Hydrogen ions move out of cells potassium moves into cells

Refeeding syndrome

Insulin surge promotes intracellular potassium uptake

Hypothermia

Cellular shift of potassium

Familial periodic paralysis

Genetic ion channel defect causing intracellular potassium sequestration

Thyrotoxic periodic paralysis

Increased Na-K ATPase activity from thyroid hormone excess

Acute catecholamine surge

Beta-adrenergic stimulation


3️⃣ Increased Potassium Loss

A. Renal Potassium Loss (Most Common in ICU)

Cause

Mechanism

Loop diuretics (furosemide)

Increased distal sodium delivery increased potassium secretion

Thiazide diuretics

Increased distal tubular potassium excretion

Hyperaldosteronism (primary or secondary)

Increased sodium reabsorption and potassium secretion in collecting duct

Magnesium deficiency

Loss of ROMK channel inhibition increased renal potassium wasting

Renal tubular disorders (Bartter syndrome)

Defective Na-K-2Cl transport in loop potassium wasting

Renal tubular disorders (Gitelman syndrome)

Defective Na-Cl transport in distal tubule potassium wasting

Renal tubular acidosis (Type I and II)

Increased potassium loss with bicarbonate wasting

Post-obstructive diuresis

Increased urinary flow causing potassium washout

Osmotic diuresis

Increased urinary solute load increases potassium excretion

Drug-induced renal loss (Amphotericin B)

Tubular membrane damage

Cisplatin

Direct tubular toxicity causing potassium wasting

Aminoglycosides

Tubular injury

High-dose steroids

Mineralocorticoid activity increasing potassium excretion

High urinary flow states

Increased distal potassium secretion


B. Gastrointestinal Potassium Loss

Cause

Mechanism

Vomiting

Indirect renal potassium loss due to metabolic alkalosis and secondary hyperaldosteronism

Diarrhea

Direct potassium loss in stool

Laxative abuse

Chronic GI potassium depletion

Intestinal fistulas

Continuous potassium-rich fluid loss

Nasogastric suction

Gastric potassium loss + metabolic alkalosis leading to renal potassium wasting

Villous adenoma of colon

Potassium-rich secretory diarrhea

Chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction

Malabsorption and chronic GI loss

High-output ileostomy / jejunostomy

Large volume electrolyte-rich losses



Clinical Features

Neuromuscular Manifestations

  • Muscle weakness
  • Fatigue
  • Myalgia
  • Paralysis (ascending pattern)
  • Respiratory muscle failure
  • Rhabdomyolysis


Cardiac Manifestations

Most dangerous complication.

  • Premature ventricular contractions
  • Ventricular tachycardia
  • Ventricular fibrillation
  • Torsades de pointes
  • Digitalis toxicity potentiation


Renal Manifestations

  • Polyuria
  • Polydipsia
  • Nephrogenic DI
  • Metabolic alkalosis


Gastrointestinal Manifestations

  • Ileus
  • Constipation
  • Abdominal distension


ECG Changes in Hypokalaemia

ECG changes correlate poorly with potassium level but remain clinically critical.

Classic Changes:

Stage

ECG Finding

Early

Flattened T wave

Intermediate

ST depression

Progressive

Prominent U wave

Severe

QT prolongation

Life-threatening

Ventricular arrhythmias



A. Urinary Potassium Measurement

Urine K

Interpretation

<20 mEq/day

Extrarenal loss or redistribution

>20 mEq/day

Renal potassium loss


B. Spot Urine Potassium/Creatinine Ratio

  • 13 mEq/g renal loss

C. Acid–Base Status

Condition

Likely Cause

Metabolic alkalosis

Vomiting, diuretics, hyperaldosteronism

Metabolic acidosis

Diarrhea, RTA


D. Magnesium Levels

Mandatory in all unexplained cases.


Potassium Replacement Therapy

Oral Replacement (Preferred if stable)

Formulation

Typical Dose

Advantages

Disadvantages / Precautions

Potassium Chloride (KCl) Tablets

20–100 mEq/day in divided doses

Most commonly used; corrects both potassium deficit and chloride depletion

Gastric irritation, ulcer risk if not taken with water/food

Sustained-release Potassium Chloride

20–80 mEq/day

Less gastric irritation, slower absorption

Risk of GI ulcer if tablet lodges in esophagus

Liquid Potassium Chloride Solution / Syrup

20–100 mEq/day divided

Better for NG tube / dysphagia patients; faster absorption

Unpleasant taste, GI irritation

Effervescent Potassium Chloride Tablets

Dissolved in water; 20–80 mEq/day

Better palatability and absorption

Requires preparation; may cause bloating

Potassium Citrate

20–60 mEq/day

Provides alkalinizing effect; prevents renal stones

Can worsen metabolic alkalosis

Potassium Bicarbonate

25–100 mEq/day

Corrects acidosis along with potassium

Not useful in alkalosis

Potassium Gluconate

Multiple tablets required

Better GI tolerance

Low potency; rarely used in ICU

Potassium Phosphate (Oral)

Dose individualized

Corrects both potassium and phosphate deficiency, use in Refeeding syndrome

Risk hyperphosphatemia

IV Potassium Replacement 

Parameter

Peripheral Line

Central Line

Maximum concentration

40 mEq/L

Up to 80–120 mEq/L

Maximum infusion rate

10 mEq/hour

20 mEq/hour

Extreme life-threatening situations

Not recommended

Up to 40 mEq/hour (ICU with monitoring)

ECG monitoring

Recommended if >10 mEq/hr

Mandatory

Risk

Phlebitis, extravasation

Arrhythmias, rapid hyperkalaemia