Affiliation:
1. Institute of Laboratory Medicine, Medical Faculty, University of Ostrava, Ostrava, Czechia
Abstract
Graphical abstract
Highlights
• Pseudonormokalemia may mean thrombocytosis, serum potassium concentration within reference ranges, and low plasma potassium concentration
• The best way to eliminate both pseudohyperkalemia and pseudonormokalemia phenomenon is to completely change towards heparin-plasma as the standard material
• Interpretative comments in patients with thrombocytosis over 500x109/L recommending plasma potassium measurement are helpful
This case report describes a case of pseudonormokalemia, true hypokalemia. Often, only laboratory values outside the normal range gain attention and false normal results are at risk of not being noticed. However, a disease state may be masked by another pathological process. Here, a 50-year old male was admitted to the Department of Internal Medicine due to sepsis from a dental infection. Initially, serum potassium measurement revealed a normal value of 4 mmol/L (reference interval 3.8-5.1 mmol/L). Thrombocyte number was above 500x109/L. Due to our policy to recommend a repeated measurement of potassium in whole blood or heparin plasma if a patient has thrombocytosis, pseudonormokalemia was identified because the heparin plasma potassium value was only 2.9 mmol/L (reference interval 3.5-4.8 mmol/L). The physiological difference between serum and plasma concentration is no more than 0.3 mmol/L. In this case, potassium concentration were falsely elevated in the serum sample, probably caused by the high number of platelets releasing potassium during clotting. Interpretative comments in patients with thrombocytosis over 500x109/L recommending plasma potassium measurement are helpful. The best way to eliminate pseudohyperkalemia and pseudonormokalemia phenomena caused by thrombocytosis is to completely change towards heparin plasma as the standard material.
Publisher
Croatian Society for Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine