Ventricular fibrillation due to severe hypokalemia induced by steroid treatment in a patient with thyrotoxic periodic paralysis.
Journal: Internal Medicine (Tokyo, Japan)
Published:
Abstract
We report a 25-year-old Japanese man with ventricular fibrillation associated with severe hypokalemia. He developed arm and leg paralysis. He had received 2 g of methylprednisolone because thoracic epidural hematoma had been suspected in another hospital. His serum potassium was 0.8 mEq/l on arrival at our hospital. Half an hour after arrival ventricular fibrillation occurred. Treatment with electric defibrillation 8 times was successful. Afterward Graves' disease was diagnosed, therefore, his clinical symptom was diagnosed as thyrotoxic periodic paralysis. We considered that the unusual condition of hyperthyroid-related hypokalemia worsened by steroid therapy induced the ventricular fibrillation.
Authors
Yasushi Miyashita, Tsuyoshi Monden, Kayo Yamamoto, Mihoko Matsumura, Nobuaki Kawagoe, Chigusa Iwata, Nobuyuki Banba, Yoshiyuki Hattori, Kikuo Kasai
Relevant Conditions