Submitted by Spencer Lord MD, written by Alex Bracey with edits by Meyers and Smith
A patient presents as a transfer from an outside facility. On arrival, he appeared air hungry, volume overloaded, and agitated. EMS was not available for a history at the time and the patient was unable to provide any details regarding his circumstances. During the initial minutes of his resuscitation the following ECG was performed:
The treating emergency physician immediately recognized this to be representative of hyperkalemia. He initiated treatment with calcium gluconate 2g calcium gluconate, insulin, bicarbonate, and lasix with modest improvement in his symptoms. Approximately 20 minutes later a repeat ECG was performed:
Similar to initial ECG with more prominent P waves. |
The similarities between these two ECGs is likely due to underdosing of calcium. The minimum dose of calcium gluconate required to rapidly stabilize the myocardium in hyperkalemia is 3g of calcium gluconate or 1g of calcium chloride (calcium chloride has 3x as much elemental calcium as calcium gluconate). More calcium than this minimum is often required. Importantly, there is no upper limit to the amount of calcium that can be administered in severe hyperkalemia and the dose is the amount required to normalize ECG abnormalities, improve hemodynamics, or achieve ROSC in cases of cardiac arrest.
Upon thorough examination of the patient, the emergency staff identified an upper extremity fistula and began arranging for emergent dialysis. He continued to be symptomatic, with periods of bradycardia to the 30s. The patient was treated with calcium gluconate nearly every 15 minutes for these persistent symptoms and albuterol was administered. Dialysis was emergently performed, and this ECG was performed 30 minutes in to the session:
perfect case, thanks sharing!
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