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Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Hyperkalemia in very low birth weight infants.
Journal of Pediatrics 1992 August
PURPOSE: To assess the frequency and pathogenesis of hyperkalemia in the very low birth weight infant.
METHODS: Infants who weighed less than 1000 gm at birth were prospectively entered into the study within 12 hours of birth. Potential risk factors for hyperkalemia were assessed. Body weight, fluid and electrolyte balance, serum levels of sodium and potassium, creatinine clearance, fractional sodium excretion, and urine sodium/potassium ratio were measured every 8 hours for 72 hours. Measurements of plasma renin, serum aldosterone, and plasma atrial natriuretic factor were made at study entry and repeated when hyperkalemia (serum potassium greater than 6.5 mmol/L) occurred or at 72 hours. Infants in whom hyperkalemia developed were compared with those in whom it did not.
RESULTS: Thirty-one infants completed the study; hyperkalemia developed in 16 (51.6%). The only difference in the occurrence of perinatal complications was the more frequent occurrence of pH less than 7.20 in infants with subsequent development of hyperkalemia. Creatinine clearance, urine output, and potassium excretion were significantly lower in the hyperkalemia group during the first 24 hours. Serum potassium concentration at 24 hours was inversely related to urine output in the prior 24 hours. Fractional sodium excretion, urine sodium/potassium ratio, and levels of renin, aldosterone, and atrial natriuretic factor did not differ between groups.
CONCLUSIONS: Hyperkalemia is a frequent complication in very low birth weight infants. Infants with low urinary flow rates during the first few hours after birth are at greatest risk for the development of hyperkalemia.
METHODS: Infants who weighed less than 1000 gm at birth were prospectively entered into the study within 12 hours of birth. Potential risk factors for hyperkalemia were assessed. Body weight, fluid and electrolyte balance, serum levels of sodium and potassium, creatinine clearance, fractional sodium excretion, and urine sodium/potassium ratio were measured every 8 hours for 72 hours. Measurements of plasma renin, serum aldosterone, and plasma atrial natriuretic factor were made at study entry and repeated when hyperkalemia (serum potassium greater than 6.5 mmol/L) occurred or at 72 hours. Infants in whom hyperkalemia developed were compared with those in whom it did not.
RESULTS: Thirty-one infants completed the study; hyperkalemia developed in 16 (51.6%). The only difference in the occurrence of perinatal complications was the more frequent occurrence of pH less than 7.20 in infants with subsequent development of hyperkalemia. Creatinine clearance, urine output, and potassium excretion were significantly lower in the hyperkalemia group during the first 24 hours. Serum potassium concentration at 24 hours was inversely related to urine output in the prior 24 hours. Fractional sodium excretion, urine sodium/potassium ratio, and levels of renin, aldosterone, and atrial natriuretic factor did not differ between groups.
CONCLUSIONS: Hyperkalemia is a frequent complication in very low birth weight infants. Infants with low urinary flow rates during the first few hours after birth are at greatest risk for the development of hyperkalemia.
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