People with chronic kidney disease, diabetes, heart failure, and those taking certain blood pressure medicines are most at risk for hyperkalemia. However, everyone needs to recognize potential symptoms associated with the problem.
Learn more about the symptoms, causes, and treatment of hyperkalemia (too much potassium). Only a healthcare provider can diagnose this electrolyte disorder, so learn when you need to seek care.
Symptoms of Hyperkalemia
The symptoms of hyperkalemia are often nonspecific if present at all. Therefore, most people will not know they have hyperkalemia unless regular laboratory testing is performed. However, this is usually only done in people at risk for hyperkalemia.
When a person develops symptoms, it is usually because of one of two reasons: the potassium level is very high, or the potassium rose very rapidly. Symptoms can include:
Muscle crampsExtremity weaknessFatigue
The most severe manifestation of hyperkalemia is cardiac conduction abnormalities that lead to a heart rhythm problem. This can lead to:
Bradycardia (a slow heart rate)Chest painPalpitations
The likelihood of having such a problem depends on a person‘s risk for hyperkalemia (chronic kidney disease), level of hyperkalemia (higher than 6.5 milliequivalents per liter is very concerning), and how quickly the potassium rises (a rapid rise is problematic).
Causes of Hyperkalemia
The amount of potassium in your blood is mainly balanced by the gastrointestinal tract (intake) and kidneys (excretion). People with a healthy diet and functioning kidneys rarely develop hyperkalemia, even after eating a meal full of potassium.
However, it is difficult to know how common the disease is since many people will not have symptoms until the potassium level is concerningly high.
People with chronic kidney disease or who take medications that affect kidney function are at the highest risk for hyperkalemia. The specific conditions that put people at risk for the electrolyte disorder include:
Chronic kidney disease Diabetes mellitus (chronic conditions in which blood sugar is high) Chronic heart failure (the heart does not pump enough blood for the body’s needs) Advanced age Use of certain medications
What Medications Can Cause Hyperkalemia?
People who take certain medications are at higher risk of developing hyperkalemia. These medications include:
Potassium-sparing diuretics, such as Midamor (amiloride) Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, such as Zestril (lisinopril) Angiotensin II receptor blockers, such as Avapro (irbesartan) Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists, such as Inspra (eplerenone) Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as Motrin (ibuprofen) Lanoxin (digoxin) Heparin Beta-blockers, such as Lopressor (metoprolol) Calcineurin inhibitors, such as Gengraf (cyclosporine) Trimethoprim (found in the antibiotic Bactrim) Pentam (pentamidine)
Are There Tests to Diagnose the Cause of Hyperkalemia?
Hyperkalemia is diagnosed through a blood test that measures your electrolytes. An abnormally high potassium level is generally considered to be higher than 5.0 milliequivalents per liter (mEq/L). However, some people may not have any symptoms at this or even higher levels (greater than 6.5 milliequivalents per liter).
Although some medications may increase your risk for hyperkalemia, these medicines show significant overall survival benefits when used appropriately in people with chronic heart failure, hypertension, or diabetes.
Once a blood test shows that a person has hyperkalemia, a healthcare provider is likely to perform an electrocardiogram (ECG). This test evaluates the heart’s electrical system using electrodes placed on your chest.
Hyperkalemia can lead to life-threatening electrical problems in the heart and abnormal rhythms. A healthcare provider needs to determine whether the hyperkalemia is already leading to concerning electrical changes. If so, treatment of hyperkalemia becomes emergent rather than urgent.
How to Treat Hyperkalemia
Treatment will depend on whether there is acute or chronic hyperkalemia.
Acute Hyperkalemia
The treatment of hyperkalemia can depend on how high the potassium is and whether the change has happened quickly or gradually. It can also depend on whether the potassium level is beginning to affect your heart. Therefore, a healthcare provider may perform an ECG to look for electrical problems.
The decision to treat a high potassium level rests with a healthcare provider, especially since the diagnosis cannot be made unless blood tests are performed. Generally, a serum potassium level greater than 5.5 milliequivalents per liter is a threshold for treatment.
When a healthcare provider is concerned about a rapid rise in potassium or if an individual has ECG changes, emergency treatment will be initiated and will first stabilize the heart. The most critical medication at this point in treatment is calcium gluconate or calcium chloride. This medication specifically stabilizes the electricity in the heart.
Experts think that these people develop “resistance” to higher potassium levels since they are likely to have moderately high levels regularly. Therefore, they are less likely to develop symptoms or cardiac problems when the potassium level is mild-to-moderately elevated.
Additional treatments that will commence include:
Insulin with glucose Inhaled albuterol Sodium bicarbonate
These medications will help lower the blood potassium level by moving the potassium inside the cells. It is important to know that a blood potassium level measures potassium outside your cells. Potassium inside a cell is less dangerous and is not measured on the blood test. To rid the blood and body of too much potassium, a person must receive:
Hemodialysis: Blood is removed through a line in a vein. Then, it’s filtered through a dialyzer instrument and returned to the person via another line. Certain diuretics, such as Lasix (furosemide), eliminate the potassium in the urine.
Chronic Hyperkalemia
People with chronic hyperkalemia are challenging to spot because they are usually asymptomatic. Often, chronic hyperkalemia is only detected through regular laboratory testing.
The treatment for chronic hyperkalemia also includes hemodialysis or certain diuretics, but typically healthcare providers modify the dose or type of antihypertensive medication that is potentially leading to chronic hyperkalemia.
However, another alternative is to use medications that bind to potassium and eliminate it through the gastrointestinal tract. These potassium binders allow your healthcare provider to keep you on beneficial antihypertensive medications while treating chronic hyperkalemia. These medications include:
Kayexalate (sodium polystyrene sulfonate) Veltassa (patiromer calcium sorbitex) Lokelma (sodium zirconium cyclosilicate)
Complications and Risk Factors Associated With Hyperkalemia
There are no major chronic long-term complications associated with hyperkalemia. However, people with repeated episodes of hyperkalemia are at higher risk of dying from the electrolyte problem that can lead to cardiac arrest.
Generally, the people at the highest risk for death from hyperkalemia are those with multiple medical issues or those who are critically ill in the hospital.
When to See a Healthcare Provider
Hyperkalemia often does not lead to symptoms, so knowing when to seek care can be challenging.
However, if you develop severe generalized weakness or have difficulty moving your lower extremities, there is a chance you have an electrolyte problem. In this situation, you should seek care for further testing to evaluate for hyperkalemia along with a whole host of other medical problems.
People with risk factors for hyperkalemia should follow their healthcare provider’s instructions regarding medications and diet to avoid dangerous potassium levels.
Summary
Hyperkalemia is an electrolyte disorder where the body has too much potassium. Symptoms are often lacking, but some people can develop muscle cramps and extreme weakness.
The most common cause of hyperkalemia is chronic kidney disease, but people who take certain antihypertensive medications are also at risk for the problem. Hyperkalemia can only be diagnosed through a blood test.
Treating acute hyperkalemia is life-saving and includes medications that stabilize the heart and remove potassium from the body. Knowing if you have hyperkalemia can be challenging, so it’s vital to seek care when you feel extreme weakness. Furthermore, people at risk for hyperkalemia should have regular blood checks.
A Word From Verywell
Hyperkalemia in healthy people is rare. However, if you feel extreme weakness or muscle cramps, you could have any electrolyte disorder, including hyperkalemia. Therefore, you should seek care.
If you are at risk for hyperkalemia based on your underlying medical problems or medications, discuss regular testing with your healthcare provider to ensure a proper potassium level.
Extreme physical exercise or weight liftingTumor lysis syndrome related to cancerExtreme heat illnessUse of sympathomimetic drugs (stimulants that increase heart rate and blood pressure) like cocaine