- Areflexia
- Ascending paralysis
- Respiratory failure
- AV prolonged transmission to complete Heart Block
Rationale of Calcium Use
a. Further calcium
beyond first 1-2 dose are ineffective for additional myocardial stabilization
unlessHypocalcemia
2. Effect occurs in 1-3
minutes and lasts for 30-60 minutes
a. Anticipate EKG
improvement within 3 minutes
3. Caution in Digoxin Toxicity (may worsen)
a. Use slower infusion
(over 20-30 minutes)
b. Consider Calcium Gluconate 10 ml in 100 ml of D5
infused over 20-30 minutes
c. Consider Magnesium as alternative to Calcium
4. Calcium Chloride (1.4 mEq/ml)
a. Dose: 5 ml over 10
minutes
b. May repeat second
dose in 5 minutes if EKG not improved
c. Preferred
historically for shock or cardiac instability (especially if central access)
i. However Calcium Gluconate likely has same
efficacy with better peripheral IV safety
ii. See Intravenous Calcium for differences
between calcium preparations
5. Calcium Gluconate 10% (0.4 mEq/ml)
a. Preferred agent if
only peripheral IV available (Decreased venous sclerosis with infusion)
b. Initial dose: 10 ml
over 2-5 minutes (10 minutes is lower risk if time allows)
c. Second dose after 5
minutes if EKG not improved
References:
- Hyperkalaemia Management. http://www.fpnotebook.com/Renal/Potassium/HyprklmMngmnt.htm
- http://www.aafp.org/afp/2006/0115/p283.html
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.