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Hyperkalaemia and the ECG

Sep 11, 2025

A 65 yo patient with a history of hypertension and mild renal impairment, presents to your rural emergency department with some lightheadedness and shortness of breath.

His examination is normal. Bloods are sent for FBC and EUC and a troponin and an ECG is done. Does the ECG show changes consistent with hyperkalaemia?

(1)

In fact, this is a bit of a trick question, made to highlight a point.
The blood results on this patient come back and show Na 144 mmol/L, K 9.2 mmol/L. The creatinine is high. This ECG above is normal, without the expected ECG abnormalities of hyperkalaemia.

In experimental models there is an orderly progression of ECG changes, with increasing potassium. This does not always occur in clinical practice. There are multiple case reports of high potassium levels with no or minor changes in the ECG.

Studies have found that only about 50% of patients with a potassium greater than 6.8 mmol/L had ECG changes (2).

A Normal ECG Does Not Exclude Hyperkalaemia.

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