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