| Literature DB >> 30450476 |
Hima Bindu Yalamanchili1,2,3, Sumeyye Calp-Inal1,2,3, Xin J Zhou4, Devasmita Choudhury1,2,3,5.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30450476 PMCID: PMC6224672 DOI: 10.1016/j.ekir.2018.07.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int Rep ISSN: 2468-0249
Chronology of serum laboratory parameters of the case
| Time of the laboratory test (month-year) | BUN level (mg/dl) | SCr level (mg/dl) | K level (mEq/l) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 01-2012 | 12.0 | 1.22 | 3.1 |
| 01-2015 | 19.3 | 1.76 | 3.1 |
| 02-2015 (biopsy) | 19.3 | 2.10 | 2.4 |
| 05-2015 | 12.4 | 1.72 | 3.7 |
BUN, blood urea nitrogen; K, serum potassium; Scr, serum creatinine.
Figure 1Light microscopy image of a kidney biopsy specimen in a patient with hypokalemia showing extensive vacuolization of the proximal tubules with acute tubular injury. Hematoxylin and eosin, original magnification ×200.
Figure 2High-magnification image of a kidney biopsy specimen in the same patient showing irregular large intracytoplasmic vacuoles and tubular degeneration. Hematoxylin and eosin, original magnification ×400.
Figure 3Light microscopy (trichrome-stained) image of a kidney biopsy specimen in the same patient showing sclerotic glomeruli and moderate interstitial fibrosis. Original magnification ×100.
Figure 4Electron microscopy image of a kidney biopsy specimen in the same patient showing lysosomal vacuoles (arrows) with a typical vacuolar membrane and electron lucent contents in the proximal and distal tubules. Original magnification ×4000.
Summary of hypokalemic nephropathy cases found in the literature search
| Study | Age (yr) | M/F | K level (mEq/l) | Etiology | Polyuria | Albuminuria | Maximum SG | Renal function: BUN/Cr/CrCl | Kidney abnormality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Watson and Katz | 44 | F | 1.9–2.3 | Excessive 9α-fluorohydrocortisone to adrenalectomized patients, causing hypokalemia for 1 wk | + | − | 1.010 | BUN 16 mg% | ND |
| Benyajati | 33 | M | 3.6–5.6 | Acute diarrhea due to cholera for 7 h | − | ND | ND | BUN 46–264 mg% | Autopsy: “fine to occasionally large vacuolization in the cytoplasm” and severe ischemic ATN |
| 24 | M | 4.1–7.1 | Acute cholera diarrhea for 10 h | Anuric | ND | ND | BUN 42–133 mg% | No vacuolization and ischemic ATN | |
| 56 | M | 3.7–4.3 | Acute cholera diarrhea for 24 h | Anuric | ND | ND | BUN 57–200 mg% | Autopsy: “severe vacuolar degeneration most marked in the convoluted tubular cells” and mild ATN | |
| 53 | M | ND | Acute cholera diarrhea for 6 h and opium addiction for 30 yr | Anuric | + | ND | BUN 50–100 mg% | Autopsy: “severe degree of vacuolar degeneration” | |
| 18 | M | Normal | Cholera diarrhea for 10 h | Anuric | + | ND | BUN 44–266 mg% | ND | |
| Galloway | 57 | M | 2.2 | Diarrhea: tropical sprue for 3 wk | ND | + | 1.015 | BUN 23 mg% | ND |
| 41 | F | 0.5 | Vomiting for 3 wk | ND | + | Not obtained | BUN 66 mg% | Autopsy: “tubular vacuolization” | |
| 30 | F | 3.1 | Vomiting for 6 wk, struma ovarii | ND | + | 1.010 | BUN 104 mg% | Autopsy: “diffuse degeneration of the tubules with swelling” | |
| Cameron | 54 | F | 2–2.3 | Diarrhea for 13 yr due to functioning ganglioneuroblastoma | ND | ND | 1.004–1.022 | CrCl 66 l/d | ND |
| Wagner | 38 | F | 2–3.3 | Abuse of diuretics for 10 yr | ND | ND | 1.010–1.014 | Cr 1.7–2.0 mg% | “Focal vacuolization of the proximal tubular epithelium” |
| Buridi | 53 | F | 1.3 | Chronic osmotic diarrhea due to the consumption of high fructose corn syrup drink (Big Red, Louisville, KY) | + | ND | 1.005 | Cr 13 mg% | Biopsy not done |
| Ishikawa | 29 | F | 1.7 | Due to anorexia nervosa for 10 yr, purging and licorice ingestion (30 tablets/d for 4 mo) | + | ND | 1.005 | Cr 1.5 mg% | “Severely damaged tubular cells with intense vacuolar formations” |
| Yasuhara | 26 | F | 2 | 8-y h/o binge/purge anorexia nervosa | ND | ND | ND | BUN 10.3 mg% | Initial biopsy: “juxtaglomerular hyperplasia” |
| Bock | 19–68 | 4 M, 17 F | 2.0–3.2 | 2–16 yr h/o hypokalemia | ND | Yes | ND | CrCl <90 ml/min per 1.73 m2 in 14 of 21 patients | “Hydropic degeneration, atrophy, destruction, and regeneration of tubular cells most striking in the proximal tubule” |
+, present; −, absent; 1°, primary; 2°, secondary; ATN, acute tubular necrosis; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; Cr, creatinine; CrCl, creatinine clearance; F, female; h/o, history of; K, serum potassium; M, male; ND, no data; SCr, serum creatinine; SG, specific gravity.
Teaching points
Hypokalemic nephropathy is a progressive renal disease that is associated with chronic hypokalemia and may lead to end-stage kidney disease without prompt treatment. |
Clinical features include low urine specific gravity, polyuria, tubular proteinuria, and inactive urinary sediment. |
Biopsy findings include intracytoplasmic vacuoles in renal tubular cells, chronic inflammation, and interstitial fibrosis. The vacuoles in hypokalemic nephropathy are larger, irregular, and coarse and do not stain for fat or glycogen. |
Pathogenesis is mediated via an imbalance in vasoactive mediators, leading to vasoconstriction and medullary ischemia. |
Future prospective studies are needed to identify the effect of timely treatment of low potassium on reversal of renal damage. |