Publication: Urine potassium per hour as a marker for renal potassium losses
Issued Date
2011-11-01
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ISSN
01252208
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2-s2.0-84856999196
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand. Vol.94, No.11 (2011), 1337-1345
Suggested Citation
Bunyong Phakdeekitcharoen, Chatchai Kreepala, Sarinya Boongird Urine potassium per hour as a marker for renal potassium losses. Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand. Vol.94, No.11 (2011), 1337-1345. Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/12229
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Title
Urine potassium per hour as a marker for renal potassium losses
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Abstract
Background: Hypokalemia, serum potassium (K) < 3.5 mEq/L, is a serious and common clinical problem. The traditional diagnosis of renal potassium losses is 24-hr urine potassium (24U K ) ≥ 20 mEq/day during hypokalemia. Immediate replacement of potassium is often required to prevent complication but may normalize serum K during 24-hr urine collection and render the test inconclusive. Material and Method: The authors examined the ability of urinary indices including 24U K , transtubular potassium gradient (TTKG), fractional excretion of potassium (FE K ), urine potassium-creatinine ratio (UK/Cr) and spot UK and introduced urine potassium per hour during the first 8 hours (U K /hr) as a novel index for evaluation of hypokalemia during treatment. Any serum K level ≥ 4 mEq/L during urine collection was defined as normalized serum K. In the present study, the final classification of renal K losses in non-normalized 24-hr serum K group was made when 24U K ≥ 20 mEq/day. In normalized group, the final classification of renal or non-renal K losses was based on the majority of the results of four urine indices including TTKG, FE K , U K/Cr , and spot U K . Results: Of 61 patients (renal:non-renal = 50:11), 51% and 18% met the criteria of normalized 24-hr and 8-hr serum K. Over all, the U K /hr ≥ 0.9 mEq/hr can indicate renal K losses with a sensitivity of 96% and specificity of 72.7% compared with the 24U K ≥ 20 mEq/day of 100% and 54.5%, respectively. In a subgroup of normalized 24-hr serum K, the sensitivity and specificity of UK/hr = 95.5% and 77.8% whereas 24UK = 100% and 44.4%, respectively. Conclusion: U K /hr is a new practical, simple, and reliable marker that can be applied to evaluate hypokalemic patients during treatment with comparable sensitivity and specificity with 24U K .