Hyperkalemia in Salt-Wasting Nephropathy
- 1 August 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 132 (2), 203-208
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1973.03650080047009
Abstract
Episodes of hyperkalemia associated with severe muscle weakness dominated the clinical course of a patient with salt-losing nephropathy. The evaluation of urinary excretory patterns of electrolytes under varying intakes of sodium suggested that a reduction of glomerular filtration below a critically low rate was the main factor responsible for renal retention of potassium with resulting hyperkalemia.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Disturbances in Water- and Salt Metabolism in the Final Stage of Chronic Renal Insufficiency.Acta Medica Scandinavica, 2009
- Exchangeable Potassium and Renal Potassium Handling in Advanced Chronic Renal Failure in ManNephron, 1971
- Severe Symptomatic Hyperkalemia in an Adrenalectomized Woman Due to Enhanced Mineralocorticoid RequirementAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1967
- THE RENAL REGULATION OF SODIUM AND POTASSIUM IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE (CRF) AND THE EFFECT OF DIURETICS ON THE EXCRETION OF THESE IONS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1966
- Salt-losing nephritis with fixed urinary compositionThe American Journal of Medicine, 1957
- Salt Loss in Chronic Renal DiseaseBMJ, 1956
- Chronic Pyelonephritis Simulating Adrenocortical InsufficiencyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1952
- RENAL TUBULAR SECRETION OF POTASSIUM IN MAN 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1949
- TRANSFERS OF POTASSIUM IN RENAL INSUFFICIENCY 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1949
- Renal Failure Simulating Adrenocortical InsufficiencyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1944