This 58 year old patient with a PMH of CAD only (MI, 2 stents) presented awake with weakness and non-palpable pulses and no obtainable blood pressure. By ED ultrasound, he had good cardiac contractility. He was volume depleted [by ED ultrasound of Inferior Vena Cava]. He had spider angiomas and abdominal free fluid [by FAST exam]. He was ashen, with shallow breathing, no pallor. I intubated him. His prehospital ECG showed "left bundle branch block" (computer reading) with prolonged PR interval. It was identical to the following initial ECG. Based on this prehospital ECG, I gave 3 amps of calcium gluconate (as well as several liters of IV fluids for the volume depletion).
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There is sinus rhythm with prolonged PR inteval. There is a wide QRS with a wide R-wave in lateral leads and a negative complex in V1-V3, consistent with LBBB. But the QRS duration is 180 ms, which is very long and suggests hyperkalemia. In addition, there is peaking of the T-waves that is not characteristic of LBBB. |
The K returned at 7.4 and Cr at greater than 20. About this time, he started having incessant ventricular tachycardia over 30 minutes,
during which time I gave him a total of 15 amps of Ca gluconate, 5 amps of bicarb, 2 amps of D50, 10 U of insulin, 0.25 mg of terbutaline. Sometimes the V tach would spontaneously resolve; 4x it required synchronized cardioversion. He had 1 minute of asystole requiring chest compressions. During VT, his pulses were still not palpable, and ED cardiac ultrasound showed asynchronous beating, so it was difficult to assure adequate cardiac output.
ED ultrasound of the carotid artery confirmed good cerebral blood flow.
A dialysis catheter was placed, and I did a radial arterial line cutdown because of a tiny radial artery. The patient stabilized, went to dialysis, and when his K was 4.7, this was his ECG:
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The QRS is now 108 ms. There is ST depression with biphasic (down-up) T-waves in II, III, aVF and slight ST elevation with T-wave (up-down) inversion in aVL. This is suggestive of high lateral NSTEMI, but probably all due to demand ischemia. |
His peak troponin I was 3.2 ng/ml, consistent with demand ischemia (Type II MI).
1) Wide complex should always make you think of hyperKalemia.
2) The treatment for VT in hyperK is calcium. No antiarrhythmic will work.
3) No amount of calcium is too much if the patient is unstable.