Cases reported "Hypokalemia"

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1/76. Hypokalaemic, hyperchloraemic metabolic acidosis requiring ventilation.

    A 16-year-old patient required intermittent positive pressure ventilation for hypokalaemic muscle weakness resulting from metabolic complications of combined colonic bladder augmentation and incomplete voiding via a prosthetic sphincter. Catheter re-establishment of urinary flow and electrolyte replacement produced dramatic metabolic and clinical improvement allowing the return of adequate spontaneous respiration.
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2/76. Saline-resistant metabolic alkalosis, severe hypokalemia and hypertension in a 74-year-old woman.

    The case of a 74-year-old woman with past history of hypertension and cerebrovascular accident admitted with pneumonia, dehydration, hypernatremia and severe hypokalemic alkalosis is presented. After correction of the hypertonic dehydration, the hypokalemia and alkalosis persisted in spite of aggressive potassium supplementation and the patient became hypertensive. Mineralocorticoid excess was suspected and excluded after extensive endocrinological testing. The use of aldactone failed to revert the abnormalities. triamterene administration corrected the electrolytes and acid base aberrations, and dramatically improved the blood pressure control. This clinical picture is compatible with the diagnosis of Liddle's syndrome. Our patient exemplifies the unique occurrence of hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis in association with volume contraction at the start of the hospitalization and volume expansion later on her course.
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3/76. hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis: algorithms for combined clinical problem solving.

    This article reviews an approach to patients with hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis using the information obtained from spot urine chloride values, blood pressure determinations, and renin and aldosterone measurements in order to simplify clinical problem solving.
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4/76. Hyponatremic-hypertensive syndrome associated with renovascular hypertension: a case report.

    Renovascular hypertension occasionally manifests clinically as electrolyte disorders and albuminuria in addition to elevated blood pressure. A 49-year-old man who had renovascular hypertension also had severe hypokalemia, hyponatremia, polyuria and polydipsia that were treated by an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and resection of an atrophic kidney with a compromised blood supply. This is a case of hyponatremic-hypertensive syndrome related to renovascular hypertension and occurring as an additional abnormality.
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5/76. A case of severe hypertension caused by ACTH-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia.

    This report describes a rare case of ACTH-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia (AIMAH) arisen with symptomatic severe hypertension and hypokaliemia. A 55-year-old man was admitted to hospital with a clinical picture characterized by several episodes of transient ischemic attacks (TIA) and right hemiplegia, related to severe arterial hypertension. Laboratory tests showed urinary levels of catecholamines, metanephrines and vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) in normal range; high urinary free cortisol excretion, elevated serum cortisol with loss of the circadian rhythm and low ACTH plasma levels. ACTH failed to respond to CRH administration. serum cortisol levels were not modified after high doses of dexamethasone. MRI showed bilateral macronodular hyperplasia of adrenal glands, whereas pituitary-MRI did not show tumoral lesions. Therefore, ACTH-independent macronodular hyperplasia was suspected. Though obese, the patient had no typical Cushing habit, and symptomatic hypertension with hypokaliemia was the only clinical evidence for this rare kind of Cushing's syndrome. After obtaining a satisfactory control of blood pressure, the patient was successfully submitted to laparoscopic bilateral adrenalectomy and underwent complete clinical remission. The histology showed adrenal macronodular hyperplasia. During the twenty-four month follow-up, the patient had no further transient ischemic attacks or need of glucocorticoid replacement therapy and withdrew the antihypertensive drugs.
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6/76. renin-producing serous cystoadenocarcinoma of the ovary: a case report.

    BACKGROUND: Only a few renin-producing ovarian tumors have been reported, and most such ovarian tumors have been sex cord/stromal tumors. renin-producing ovarian epithelial tumors are quite rare. CASE: A 46-year-old woman presented with hypertension and hypokalemia. Examinations of the patient revealed elevated plasma renin activity, hyperaldosteronism and a pelvic mass. Subsequently, a right ovarian tumor mass was resected. Microscopic observation of the tumor revealed a well-differentiated serous cystadenocarcinoma. Immediately after surgery, blood pressure, serum potassium, plasma renin activity and plasma aldosterone levels returned to normal ranges. RT-PCR analysis and immunohistochemical staining of this tumor indicated that it was producing renin. CONCLUSION: This is the first report of a renin-producing ovarian serous cystadenocarcinoma.
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7/76. Electrocardiographic QT prolongation and sudden death in renal hypokalemic alkalosis.

    A 3-year-old boy was found to have a mixed tubulopathy with hypokalemia (1.9 mmol/l), alkalosis (blood pH 7.51, plasma carbon dioxide pressure 46 mm Hg, plasma bicarbonate 35.7 mmol/l) and hypophosphatemia (1.21 mmol/l). An electrocardiogram disclosed a prolonged heart rate corrected QT interval of 490 ms. The boy was put on potassium chloride, phosphate and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents. With this treatment plasma phosphate normalized and plasma potassium increased up to 3.0-3.3 mmol/l. Three years later the child, who did not have history of gastroesophageal reflux or epileptic convulsions, suddenly died during sleep. The cause of death could not be determined through gross examination of the body. The history of hypokalemia, the QT-prolongation, the sudden death and the failure to assess the cause of death through gross examination of the body suggest that death was caused by an arrhythmia secondary to hypokalemia.
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8/76. liddle syndrome in a newborn infant.

    A 10-week-old female infant developed hypertension. The elevated blood pressure was associated with metabolic alkalosis and urinary chloride wastage. The family history was unremarkable. Her urinalysis, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), and serum creatinine concentrations were all normal. A renal ultrasound was normal. A technetium-99m diethylenetriaminopentoacetic acid (DTPA) renal scan with captopril showed normal blood flow bilaterally. The head ultrasound and echocardiogram were normal. Blood epinephrine, norepinephrine, catecholamines, thyroxine, and steroid levels were also normal. Treatment with various combinations of labetalol, hydralazine, captopril, methyldopa, nifedipine, and spironolactone, all at high doses, failed to control the elevated blood pressure. serum aldosterone level and peripheral plasma renin activity were low. The lack of therapeutic response to spironolactone, with a good response to amiloride and recurrence of hypertension and metabolic alkalosis after amiloride cessation that was subsequently treated with amiloride, established the diagnosis of liddle syndrome. To our knowledge, this is the youngest patient with liddle syndrome that has been reported in the literature.
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9/76. Hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis--three case reports.

    The two most common forms of inherited normotensive hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis are Bartter's and Gitelman's syndromes. Bartter's syndrome typically present with normal or increased calcium excretion. Hypomagnesemia occurs in only one third of affected individuals. In contrast, hypomagnesemia and hypocalciuria are considered hallmarks of Gitelman's syndrome. In most patients, the symptom of muscle weakness and polyuria occur early in life, which may be attributed to potassium depletion. Despite hyperaldosteronism, the patients tend to be normotensive, which is at least explained by vascular hyperresponsiveness to prostaglandins. Therapeutic approaches to Bartter's and Gitelman's syndromes include potassium supplementation, prostaglandin synthesis inhibitors (nonsteroid anti-inflammatory agents), aldosterone antagonists and converting enzyme inhibitors. Three patients with hypokalemia, normal blood pressure, metabolic alkalosis, hyperreninemia and hyperaldosteronism are described. Two patients had Bartter's syndrome and one patients had Gitelman's syndrome.
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10/76. Cardioactive steroid poisoning from an herbal cleansing preparation.

    We describe a case of unintentional poisoning from a cardioactive steroid and the subsequent analytic investigation. A 36-year-old woman with no past medical history and taking no conventional medications ingested an herbal preparation marketed for "internal cleansing." Its ingredients were neither known to the patient nor listed on the accompanying literature. The next morning, nausea, vomiting, and weakness developed. In the emergency department, her blood pressure was 110/60 mm Hg, and her pulse rate was 30 beats/min. Her ECG revealed a junctional rhythm at a rate of 30 beats/min and a digitalis effect on the ST segments. After empiric therapy with 10 vials of digoxin-specific Fab (Digibind), her symptoms resolved, and she reverted to a sinus rhythm at a rate of 68 beats/min. Her serum digoxin concentration measured by means of the fluorescence polarization immunoassay (Abbott TDx) was 1.7 ng/mL. Further serum analysis with the Tina Quant digoxin assay, a more digoxin-specific immunoassay, found a concentration of 0.34 ng/mL, and an enzyme immunoassay for digitoxin revealed a concentration of 20 ng/mL (therapeutic range 10 to 30 ng/mL). serum analysis by means of high-performance liquid chromatography revealed the presence of active digitoxin metabolites; the parent compound was not present. When the diagnosis of cardioactive steroid poisoning is suspected clinically, laboratory analysis can confirm the presence of cardioactive steroids by using immunoassays of varying specificity. An empiric dose of 10 vials of digoxin-specific Fab might be beneficial in patients poisoned with an unknown cardioactive steroid.
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