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Early-onset neonatal hyperkalemia associated with maternal hypermagnesemia: a case report.

Kenichi TanakaHiroko MoriRieko SakamotoShirou MatsumotoHiroshi MitsubuchiKimitoshi NakamuraMasanori Iwai
Published in: BMC pediatrics (2018)
The early-onset hyperkalemia may have been caused by the accumulation of potassium ions transported through the placenta, the shift of potassium ions from the intracellular to the extracellular space in the infant due to the malfunctioning of the Na+/K+ pump and the inhibition of renal distal tube potassium ion secretion, there is a possibility that these mechanisms were induced by maternal and fetal hypermagnesemia after maternal magnesium sulfate administration. Because neonatal hyperkalemia poses a significant risk for the development of life-threatening cardiac arrhythmia, this case highlights the necessity of maternal blood magnesium monitoring during magnesium sulfate administration and neonatal blood potassium monitoring when there is severe maternal hypermagnesemia at delivery.
Keyphrases
  • early onset
  • birth weight
  • late onset
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • quantum dots
  • pregnant women
  • heart failure
  • minimally invasive
  • body mass index
  • reactive oxygen species