Ineffectiveness of Intermittent Hemodialysis in a Critically Ill COVID-19 Patient: A Case of Persistent Heparin-Induced Hyperkalemia

Author:

Nlandu Yannick M.12ORCID,Engole Yannick M.12,Mboliassa Marie-France I.12,Sakaji Théodore-Junior M.1,Kobo Patrick U.13,Boloko Patrick M.13,Mafuta Pally K.13,Tsangu Joseph P.13,Van Echkout Karel1,Kanku Jean-Pierre M.1,Kalifa Golan1,Ahmed Rodolphe1,Bukabau Justine B.12

Affiliation:

1. Intensive Care Unit, Centre Médical de Kinshasa, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo

2. Nephrology Unit, Kinshasa University Hospital, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo

3. Intensive Care Unit, Kinshasa University Hospital, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Abstract

Heparin is widely used in the intensive care unit despite the risk of bleeding it can cause. Although it is rarely reported, hyperkalemia is one of the side effects associated with heparin therapy (unfractionated or fractionated heparin). It would be secondary to hypoaldosteronism by blocking the biosynthesis of aldosterone in the adrenal gland and often appears in context of prolonged heparin therapy or inappropriate renin production in elderly, diabetic, and kidney insufficiency patients. We report a case of persistent hyperkalemia in a diabetic COVID-19 patient treated with curative heparin in the context of severe COVID-19.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Nephrology

Reference9 articles.

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5. Refractoriness of hyperkalemia and hyperphophatemia in dialysis-dependent AKI associate with COVID-19;A. Ramanand

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