On the mechanism of rhabdomyolysis in potassium depletion
Open Access
- 1 July 1972
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 51 (7), 1750-1758
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci106976
Abstract
Rhabdomyolysis and myoglobinuria occur commonly in men who sustain environmental heat injury during intensive physical training in hot climates. These also occur in patients with potassium depletion. Since physical training in hot climates may be accompanied by serious losses of body potassium, the possibility was considered that performance of strenuous exercise when potassium deficient might enhance susceptibility to rhabdomyolysis. Potassium is released from contracting skeletal muscle fibers and its rising concentration in interstitial fluid is thought to dilate arterioles thereby mediating the normal rise of muscle blood flow during exercise. If potassium release from deficient muscle were subnormal, exercise would not be accompanied by sufficient muscle blood flow and rhabdomyolysis could occur by ischemia. This hypothesis was examined by comparing the effect of electrically stimulated exercise on muscle blood flow, potassium release, and histology of the intact gracilis muscle preparation in normal and potassium-depleted dogs. In normal dogs, muscle blood flow and potassium release rose sharply during exercise. In contrast, muscle blood flow and potassium release were markedly subnormal in depleted dogs despite brisk muscle contractions. Although minor histologic changes were sometimes observed in nonexercised potassium-depleted muscle, frank rhabdomyolysis occurred in each potassium-depleted animal after exercise. These findings support the hypothesis that ischemia may be the mechanism of rhabdomyolysis with exercise in potassium depletion.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pathophysiology of Intense Physical Conditioning in a Hot Climate. I. MECHANISMS OF POTASSIUM DEPLETIONJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1972
- Renal, Metabolic, and Circulatory Responses to Heat and ExerciseAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1970
- Acute renal failure due to heat injury: An analysis of ten cases associated with a high incidence of myoglobinuriaThe American Journal of Medicine, 1967
- Exertional rhabdomyolysis with myoglobinuria in a large group of military traineesNeurology, 1967
- The Effects of Hyperosmolarity on Intact and Isolated Vascular Smooth Muscle. Possible Role in Exercise HyperemiaJournal of Vascular Research, 1967
- Hypokalaemia, Flaccid Quadruparesis, and Myoglobinuria with Carbenoxolone (Biogastrone)BMJ, 1966
- Hypokalemic Myopathy with Myoglobinuria Associated with Licorice IngestionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1966
- The Potassium Ion as a Vasodilator during Muscular ExerciseActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1965
- Coexistent Addison's Disease and ThyrotoxicosisArchives of Internal Medicine, 1962
- The renal, cardiovascular, hematologic and serum electrolyte abnormalities of heat strokeThe American Journal of Medicine, 1961