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Guide — Electrolytes

Potassium Disorders: Hypokalemia & Hyperkalemia

Causes, clinical manifestations, ECG changes, treatment approaches, nursing interventions, and patient safety concerns for potassium imbalances — the most common electrolyte disorders in clinical nursing practice.

11 min read · Electrolytes

Educational use only. IV potassium protocols and dose thresholds vary by institution. Always follow facility policy and provider orders. Never administer IV potassium without a pump. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Potassium Physiology

Normal serum potassium: 3.5–5.0 mEq/L. Potassium is the primary intracellular cation — approximately 98% of total body potassium is inside cells. Small changes in serum K⁺ reflect large total-body shifts.

Potassium is essential for cardiac and skeletal muscle cell membrane repolarization. Even small deviations from normal can produce life-threatening dysrhythmias.

  • K⁺ moves INTO cells with: insulin, alkalosis, beta-2 agonists (albuterol), glucose administration
  • K⁺ moves OUT OF cells with: acidosis, cell destruction, tissue breakdown, succinylcholine
  • Kidneys excrete 90% of total body potassium — renal failure = hyperkalemia risk
  • Aldosterone stimulates kidney K⁺ excretion — aldosterone excess = hypokalemia

Hypokalemia (K⁺ < 3.5 mEq/L)

Causes

  • GI losses: vomiting (gastric acid contains K⁺), diarrhea, ileostomy, NG suction
  • Renal losses: loop diuretics (furosemide), thiazide diuretics, hyperaldosteronism, Cushing's syndrome, hypomagnesemia (Mg is required for renal K⁺ conservation)
  • Transcellular shift: insulin administration, alkalosis, beta-2 agonist excess
  • Inadequate intake: malnutrition, eating disorders, prolonged NPO
  • Medications: amphotericin B, aminoglycosides, corticosteroids, insulin overdose

Clinical Manifestations

SystemFindings
CardiacFlat or inverted T waves, U waves (positive deflection after T wave), prolonged QT, PVCs, atrial and ventricular dysrhythmias; potentiates digoxin toxicity
MusculoskeletalMuscle weakness (legs first), cramps, fatigue; severe: flaccid paralysis, respiratory muscle weakness
GIConstipation, decreased bowel sounds, paralytic ileus
RenalPolyuria, polydipsia (K depletion causes nephrogenic DI)

Treatment

SeverityK⁺ RangeApproach
Mild3.0–3.5 mEq/LOral KCl (most preferred); increase dietary potassium (bananas, oranges, potatoes, leafy greens)
Moderate2.5–3.0 mEq/LOral KCl preferred if tolerated; IV KCl if unable to take PO
Severe< 2.5 mEq/L or symptomaticIV KCl with continuous cardiac monitoring; peripheral max 10 mEq/hr; central max 40 mEq/hr; repeat labs after each replacement dose

Hyperkalemia (K⁺ > 5.0 mEq/L)

Causes

  • Decreased renal excretion (most common): acute kidney injury, chronic kidney disease, adrenal insufficiency (Addison's)
  • Medications: ACE inhibitors, ARBs, potassium-sparing diuretics (spironolactone, amiloride), NSAIDs, heparin, trimethoprim
  • Transcellular shift out of cells: metabolic acidosis, cell death (hemolysis, rhabdomyolysis, tumor lysis syndrome), succinylcholine, trauma
  • Excess intake: excessive IV potassium, salt substitutes, potassium supplements
  • Pseudohyperkalemia: hemolyzed specimen — always repeat before treating

ECG Progression (Know This Sequence)

Approximate K⁺ LevelECG ChangeClinical Significance
5.5–6.5 mEq/LPeaked (tall, narrow, symmetric) T wavesFirst ECG change — alert provider immediately
6.5–7.5 mEq/LProlonged PR, widened QRSConduction delay — emergency treatment needed
> 7.5 mEq/LSine wave pattern, loss of P wavesImminent cardiac arrest — code situation
> 8.0 mEq/LVentricular fibrillation, asystoleCardiac arrest

Treatment — Sequential Priority

PriorityAgentMechanismOnset
1stCalcium gluconate (or calcium chloride)Stabilizes cardiac cell membrane — does NOT lower K⁺Minutes
2ndInsulin (regular) + D50WDrives K⁺ into cells; dextrose prevents hypoglycemia15–30 min
2nd altSodium bicarbonateCorrects acidosis; drives K⁺ into cells (most effective in acidotic patients)30–60 min
3rdSodium polystyrene sulfonate (Kayexalate) or patiromerBinds K⁺ in GI tract — eliminates from the bodyHours
DefinitiveDialysisRemoves K⁺ from the body — most effective for renal failurePer access

IV Potassium Safety

  • Never administer IV potassium as an IV push or bolus — cardiac arrest risk
  • Always use an IV infusion pump — never gravity drip
  • Peripheral line: maximum 10 mEq/hr, maximum concentration 10 mEq/100 mL (burning at site is common — warn patient)
  • Central line: up to 40 mEq/hr with continuous cardiac telemetry monitoring
  • Recheck potassium level after each replacement dose before administering more
  • Confirm adequate urine output (≥ 30 mL/hr) before administering potassium
  • Correct hypomagnesemia first — without adequate Mg²⁺, the kidneys cannot conserve K⁺ and replacement will be ineffective

NCLEX Pearls

IV K⁺ = never IV push. This is a top-5 medication error and a frequent NCLEX safety question.

Digoxin + hypokalemia = dangerous combination. Hypokalemia potentiates digoxin toxicity — monitor for bradycardia, visual changes, nausea in digoxin patients with low K.

Pseudohyperkalemia: A hemolyzed blood sample releases intracellular K and gives a falsely elevated result. Always repeat before treating if the patient has no symptoms and no ECG changes.

First drug for hyperkalemia with ECG changes: Calcium gluconate — not insulin, not bicarb. It stabilizes the cardiac membrane within minutes.

Kayexalate nursing note: Not for emergency treatment (takes hours); watch for GI complications including colonic necrosis if given to post-op patients.

Urine output before K replacement: Always verify ≥ 30 mL/hr — without adequate renal function, administered potassium cannot be excreted and may cause hyperkalemia.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Infusion Nurses Society (INS) Standards of Practice · Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) · Standard laboratory reference ranges. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →