HealthCareMagic is now Ask A Doctor - 24x7 | https://www.askadoctor24x7.com

question-icon

Suggested Treatment For Hyperkalemia

default
Posted on Thu, 21 Sep 2017
Question: What can cause elevated potassium levels?
doctor
Answered by Dr. Bonnie Berger-Durnbaugh (1 hour later)
Brief Answer:
Causes of hyperkalemia (elevated blood potassium levels)

Detailed Answer:
Hello and welcome,

The most common cause of elevated potassium on blood work in someone who has never had this problem before is a problem that happened during the processing of the blood rather than from true hyperkalemia. If the blood cells break during the blood draw or running the test, potassium spills out of the blood cells and causes an abnormally high reading. Using too small of a needle and tubing (such as a butterfly with a thin tube to the test tube, leaving the blood sit too long, or other factors, can cause this cell rupture).

True causes of hyperkalemia are kidney problems (but then there would be other abnormalities on a chemistry panel such as high creatinine levels), taking a blood pressure medicine called an ACE inhibitor, which can raise potassium levels just while you are on it, adrenal problems (you would have other signs/symptoms), diabetes (again, you would have other indicators such as high sugar level), and alcohol or drug abuse (from muscle break down). Potassium supplementation can do this too.

If all of your other blood tests are normal, and you aren't taking any medications or supplements other than the multivitamin, then the most likely cause would be a handling or lab error and rechecking should show this. But it should be rechecked, and if it continues to be high, then other tests should be checked.

I hope this information helps. Please let me know if I can provide further information.
Note: For further queries related to kidney problems and comprehensive renal care, talk to a Nephrologist. Click here to Book a Consultation.

Above answer was peer-reviewed by : Dr. Chakravarthy Mazumdar
doctor
Answered by
Dr.
Dr. Bonnie Berger-Durnbaugh

General & Family Physician

Practicing since :1991

Answered : 3134 Questions

premium_optimized

The User accepted the expert's answer

Share on

Get personalised answers from verified doctor in minutes across 80+ specialties

159 Doctors Online

By proceeding, I accept the Terms and Conditions

HCM Blog Instant Access to Doctors
HCM Blog Questions Answered
HCM Blog Satisfaction
Suggested Treatment For Hyperkalemia

Brief Answer: Causes of hyperkalemia (elevated blood potassium levels) Detailed Answer: Hello and welcome, The most common cause of elevated potassium on blood work in someone who has never had this problem before is a problem that happened during the processing of the blood rather than from true hyperkalemia. If the blood cells break during the blood draw or running the test, potassium spills out of the blood cells and causes an abnormally high reading. Using too small of a needle and tubing (such as a butterfly with a thin tube to the test tube, leaving the blood sit too long, or other factors, can cause this cell rupture). True causes of hyperkalemia are kidney problems (but then there would be other abnormalities on a chemistry panel such as high creatinine levels), taking a blood pressure medicine called an ACE inhibitor, which can raise potassium levels just while you are on it, adrenal problems (you would have other signs/symptoms), diabetes (again, you would have other indicators such as high sugar level), and alcohol or drug abuse (from muscle break down). Potassium supplementation can do this too. If all of your other blood tests are normal, and you aren't taking any medications or supplements other than the multivitamin, then the most likely cause would be a handling or lab error and rechecking should show this. But it should be rechecked, and if it continues to be high, then other tests should be checked. I hope this information helps. Please let me know if I can provide further information.