TY - JOUR
T1 - Hyperkalemia After Renal Transplantation
T2 - Occurrence in a Patient With Insulin-Dependent Diabetes
AU - Rosenbaum, Robert
AU - Hoffsten, Phillip E.
AU - Cryer, Philip
AU - Klahr, Saulo
PY - 1978/8
Y1 - 1978/8
N2 - An insulin-dependent diabetic patient received a renal transplant from a living related donor without evidence of rejection. In the posttransplant period, his serum potassium concentration (3.7 to 6.7 mEq/liter) fluctuated widely with the serum glucose concentration (165 to 470 mg/dl) during the day. Serum glucose and potassium concentrations were directly correlated (r =.734, P.001). Other factors controlling the serum potassium concentration were examined. Plasma and urinary aldosterone levels were normal, plasma renin activity and aldosterone levels rose during upright activity, and urinary potassium excretion increased with the administration of exogenous mineralocorticoid. Thus, mineralocorticoid secretion and responsiveness were intact. These observations indicate that hyperkalemia in a diabetic patient can occur in the absence of a defect in potassium excretion and are consistent with the interpretation that insulinopenia, as evidenced by hyperglycemia, can result in hyperkalemia due to diminished translocation of both potassium and glucose from the extracellular to the intracellular compartment.
AB - An insulin-dependent diabetic patient received a renal transplant from a living related donor without evidence of rejection. In the posttransplant period, his serum potassium concentration (3.7 to 6.7 mEq/liter) fluctuated widely with the serum glucose concentration (165 to 470 mg/dl) during the day. Serum glucose and potassium concentrations were directly correlated (r =.734, P.001). Other factors controlling the serum potassium concentration were examined. Plasma and urinary aldosterone levels were normal, plasma renin activity and aldosterone levels rose during upright activity, and urinary potassium excretion increased with the administration of exogenous mineralocorticoid. Thus, mineralocorticoid secretion and responsiveness were intact. These observations indicate that hyperkalemia in a diabetic patient can occur in the absence of a defect in potassium excretion and are consistent with the interpretation that insulinopenia, as evidenced by hyperglycemia, can result in hyperkalemia due to diminished translocation of both potassium and glucose from the extracellular to the intracellular compartment.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0018204023&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1001/archinte.1978.03630330070020
DO - 10.1001/archinte.1978.03630330070020
M3 - Article
C2 - 354542
AN - SCOPUS:0018204023
SN - 0003-9926
VL - 138
SP - 1270
EP - 1272
JO - Archives of internal medicine
JF - Archives of internal medicine
IS - 8
ER -