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POSTOPERATIVE POTASSIUM DEFICIT AND METABOLIC ALKALOSIS. THE PATHOGENIC SIGNIFICANCE OF OPERATIVE TRAUMA AND OF POTASSIUM AND PHOSPHORUS DEPRIVATION 1
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Citations
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References
1952
Year
Patients maintained postoperatively on paren- teral fluids or a dietary intake low or lacking in potassium may develop a syndrome characterized by apathy, lethargy, muscular weakness, abdominal distension and ileus, cardiac arrhythmias and edema; and occasionally by confusion, delirium, muscular twitching and tetany. A clinical description of the syndrome as observed in 32 postopera- tive patients has appeared elsewhere (1). Evi- dence was found in these patients for the existence of potassium deficit, namely: 1) the presence of hypopotassemia, hypochloremia and metabolic al- kalosis, 2) electrocardiographic changes consistent with potassium deficit, 3) extensive expansion of the radiosodium space beyond the confines of the bromide space, suggesting that sodium had migrated into the cells to replace lost potassium, 4) lowering of erythrocyte potassium and increase of erythrocyte sodium concentrations in several patients, and 5) prompt reversal of the clinical and blood chem- ical abnormalities upon administration of adequate amounts of potassium.
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