The hypokalaemia that came from the cold

Author:

Elsayed Mohamed E1ORCID,Schick Benedikt2,Woywodt Alexander1ORCID,Palmer Biff F3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Renal Medicine, Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust , Preston, Lancashire , UK

2. Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Ulm University Medical Centre , Ulm , Germany

3. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center , Dallas , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT While electrolyte disorders are common in nephrologists’ clinical practice, hypothermia is a condition that nephrologists rarely encounter. Hypothermia can induce several pathophysiological effects on the human body, including hypokalaemia, which is reversible with rewarming. Despite growing evidence from animal research and human studies, the underlying mechanisms of hypothermia-induced hypokalaemia remain unclear. Boubes and colleagues recently presented a case series of hypokalaemia during hypothermia and rewarming, proposing a novel hypothesis for the underlying mechanisms. In this editorial, we review the current knowledge about hypothermia and associated electrolyte changes with insights into the effects of hypothermia on renal physiology.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology

Reference53 articles.

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4. Behandlung der neonatalen asphyxie unter besonderer berücksichtigung der therapeutischen hypothermie;Flemmer,2014

5. The role of deep hypothermia in cardiac surgery;Gocoł;Int J Environ Res Public Health,2021

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