Fluids, Electrolytes, Acid-Base Disorders, and Nutrition Support
Serum Potassium
(mEq/L)
Potassium Chloride Dosage
(mEq)a,b
Laboratory Tests
3.5β3.6
40 to 60 mEq
Obtain BMP, magnesium next AM
3β3.4
80 mEq
Obtain BMP, magnesium next AM; may obtain
potassium 1β2 hours after repletion is completed,
especially if losses are thought to be high; reassess
2β2.9
120 mEq
Obtain repeat serum potassium 1β2 hours after
repletion is completed and reassess; may need one
or two additional boluses; repeat; check serum
magnesium next AM; reassess
aPotassium phosphate may be considered in lieu of potassium chloride if concurrent hypokalemia and hypophosphatemia (very common in critically ill patients receiving
EN/PN). Thirty millimoles of potassium phosphate is equivalent to 44 mEq of potassium.
bLower doses may be required for patients with renal dysfunction to avoid overcorrection.
AM = morning; BMP = basic metabolic panel.
vii.
The historical assumption of βa 0.5 to 0.6 mEq/L increase in serum potassium will occur for
every 40 mEq of intravenous potassium administeredβ (J Clin Pharmacol 1994;34:1077-82;
Arch Intern Med 1990;150:613-7) is potentially inaccurate for many critically ill subpopulations
such as emaciated patients or patients with obesity, those with renal dysfunction, exaggerated
requirements such as trauma or thermally injured patients (J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2017;41:796-
804), those with volume overload, or those receiving diuretic therapy.
viii.
Serum potassium concentrations are equilibrated within 1β2 hours after completion of the
1991;19:694-9), and repeated assessments are recommended for patients with severe and/or
complicated cases of hypokalemia.
Hyperkalemia
Definition: Serum potassium greater than 5.2 mEq/L, although usually not a significant problem
until serum potassium approaches 6 mEq/L
Signs and symptoms: ECG changes (peaked and tented T waves) and arrhythmias (bradyarrhythmias,
ventricular fibrillation, asystole), symptoms similar to those of hypokalemia (weakness, paralysis)
Etiologies:
Drugs β Potassium-sparing diuretics (spironolactone, amiloride, triamterene), angiotensin-
converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs, heparin, trimethoprim, octreotide, succinylcholine, digoxin
ii.
Excessive intake (usually in combination with compromised renal function) β Be sure to
examine all intravenous fluids, EN and PN regimens, penicillin G (1.7 mEq of potassium per
million units), packed red blood cells.
iii.
Renal dysfunction (chronic kidney disease [CKD], AKI)
iv.
Hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism
Tissue catabolism (chemotherapy, rhabdomyolysis, tumor lysis syndrome, crush injury)
vi.
Severe acidemia
vii.
Older adult patients are also at risk because of decreased renal function, reduced renal
functional reserve, and loss of body cell mass.
viii.
Laboratory errors (sample hemolysis or improper sample collection)