G. Zavagli et al., THE IMPORTANCE OF THE HIGHEST NORMOKALEMIA IN THE TREATMENT OF EARLY HEPATIC-ENCEPHALOPATHY, Mineral and electrolyte metabolism, 19(6), 1993, pp. 362-367
An inverse relation is known to link blood potassium with renal synthe
sis and the release of ammonia. Given the liability of hyperammonemia
for precipitating hepatic encephalopathy (HE), 28 patients affected by
stage I HE were equally divided into two groups and maintained up to
their death at the highest (5.4-5.5 mEq/l) or the lowest (3.5-3.6 mEq/
l) normokalemia levels. When compared with the lowest normokalemia gro
up, the highest one showed an early, albeit transient, improvement in
the mental state (as assessed by both EEG and psychiatric investigatio
ns) and to a lesser extent in hepatic functions (as assessed by the va
riations in serum bilirubin, GPT, GGT and plasma prothrombin time). In
the highest normokalemia group the survival was also prolonged. The c
ause of this improvement may be related to the induced decrease in blo
od pH, the consequent depression of renal ammoniagenesis and the rise
in the arterial and urine NH4+/NH3 ratios. These factors reduce the en
try of ammonia into the cells and enhance the urinary excretion of thi
s metabolite, respectively.