| Literature DB >> 35466190 |
Kleber Goia-Nishide1, Lucas Coregliano-Ring1, Érika Bevilaqua Rangel1,2.
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus is a global health problem that affects 9.3% of the worldwide population and is associated with a series of comorbidities such as heart failure (HF) and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Diabetic patients, especially those with associated CKD, are more susceptible to present potassium disorders, in particular hyperkalemia due to kidney disease progression or use of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone blockers. Hyperkalemia is a potentially life-threatening condition that increases the risk of cardiac arrhythmia episodes and sudden death, making the management of potassium levels a challenge to reduce the mortality rate in this population. This review aims to briefly present the potassium physiology and discuss the main conditions that lead to hyperkalemia in diabetic individuals, the main signs, symptoms, and exams for the diagnosis of hyperkalemia, and the steps that should be followed to manage patients with this potentially life-threatening condition.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes mellitus; hyperkalemia; kidney and heart disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 35466190 PMCID: PMC9036284 DOI: 10.3390/diseases10020020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diseases ISSN: 2079-9721
Figure 1Distribution of potassium in different body compartments and its inflow and secretion routes.
Figure 2Potassium transport system in the kidneys.
Combined effects of insulin and glucagon on potassium and glucose regulation (intermediate situations between “high” and “low” levels of each hormone are also possible). Adapted and modified from [19].
| Condition | Insulin | Glucagon | Glucose Regulation | Potassium Regulation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Post prandial state (several hours after a meal) | Low | Low | Modest gluconeogenesis, | No effect |
| Fast | Low | High | Gluconeogenesis from endogenous AAs for sustaining glucose needs of the body | Potassium excretion issued from the cells from which AAs were catabolized for gluconeogenesis |
| Carbohydrate rich meal | High | Low | Metabolism and/or storage of | No effect |
| Meat meal (protein and potassium rich), potassium load or potassium rich meal | High | High | Increased gluconeogenesis from ingested AAs *. | Insulin-dependent storage of potassium inside cells, followed by progressive release resulting from glucagon-induced increase in urinary potassium excretion |
* AAs: Amino acids.
Figure 3Electrocardiographic (ECG) manifestations of hyperkalemia.
Figure 4Diagnostic algorithm in hyperkalemia. Adapted and modified from [31]. GFR—glomerular filtration rate; RTA—renal tubular acidosis; PHA—pseudohypoaldosteronism.
Figure 5Mechanisms of cardiac arrhythmia in hyperkalemia: As K+ levels increase in the ECF (extracellular fluid), the magnitude of K+ gradient across the cell membrane is reduced and so is the absolute value of the membrane potential. Membrane potential becomes less negative moving closer to the threshold potential, making it easier to initiate an action potential. The effect it has on the excitability of myocytes depends on K+ levels. While initial changes seem to increase cardiomyocyte excitability, a further rise in K+ has the opposite effect. This is because the value of the membrane potential at the onset of an action potential determines the number of fast voltage-gated Na+ channels activated during the depolarization. As this value becomes less negative in hyperkalemia, the number of available fast Na+ channels decreases, resulting in a lower influx of Na+ and, subsequently, slower impulse conduction. These changes are associated with an increase in K+ equilibrium potential (EK). ECG changes produced by hyperkalemia follow a typical pattern that generally correlates with K+ serum levels: when fast Na+ channels are activated, an increase in excitability and conduction velocity is observed in ventricular cardiomyocytes and early repolarization occurs synchronously, which leads to a peaked-T wave; as K+ increases in ECF, the inactivation of fast voltage-dependent Na+ channels and the activation of K+ channels lead to reductions in conduction velocity and can render cells refractory to excitation, which promotes P wave widening and flattening, PR interval widening, QRS complex widening and eventually blending with T wave, generating, therefore, a sinus-wave; therefore, these changes comprise repolarization defects, conduction delays, paralysis of atria, and junctional/ventricular rhythms.