Waxing and Waning Weakness

aka Metabolic Muddle 002

A 50 year old Chinese female presents with severe weakness.  She has a history of previous similar episodes that self-resolved.

This is her admission ECG:

image_1

ECG of a patient with recurrent weakness (click to enlarge)

Questions

Q1. Describe the ECG.

The ECG findings include:

  • sinus rhythm with a rate of 70bpm
  • Normal axis
  • Flattened T waves with the presence of U waves.
  • Normal QTc (Corrected QT)

Q2. What is the likely diagnosis?

Hypokalaemic periodic paralysis

This patient had a potassium of 1.9 mmol/L.

Q3. How is this condition treated?

During an acute attack treatment involves correction of hypokalaemia with potassium supplementation.

For prophylaxis, patients are usually treated with acetazolamide.

Q4. Why is it important to measure the thyroid function?

The major differential here is thyrotoxic periodic paralysis.

Thyrotoxic periodic paralysis also causes periodic paralysis associated with hypokalaemia. Interestingly, the prevalence of thyrotoxic periodic paralysis in patients with thyrotoxicosis is estimated to be 0.1-0.2% in Caucasians and 13-14% in Chinese.

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About Paul Young

A proud graduate of The Breakfast Club, Paul is an Intensivist in Wellington, New Zealand. According to his father, Paul studied medicine after performing a cost-effectiveness analysis of his own biomedical fragility – a champion runner as a youth, he now struggles with a zimmer frame. Although he started out in the ED, Paul feels physically ill whenever he steps foot there these days.

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