Electrolyte replacement
Nursing pharmacology study reference (NCLEX-style monograph). Numeric values are standard teaching ranges for study and must be verified against current manufacturer labeling before clinical use. This is educational content, not prescribing guidance.
Electrolyte replacement — Electrolyte replacement; Electrolyte salts.
Identification
- Therapeutic class: Electrolyte replacement.
- Pharmacologic class: Electrolyte salts.
Pharmacology
- Mechanism of action: Replace deficient electrolytes to restore normal physiology.
- Onset / peak / duration: Oral slower; IV faster (must be controlled).
- Half-life / therapeutic level: Targeted to normal serum ranges.
Clinical use
- Indications: Hypokalemia (potassium), hypomagnesemia (magnesium), hypocalcemia and emergencies (calcium), acidosis (bicarbonate), hypophosphatemia (phosphate).
- Usual dose, route, frequency: Oral or IV; IV potassium always diluted and infused slowly via a pump.
- Maximum dose / adjustments: IV potassium never given by IV push and not faster than about 10 mEq/hr peripherally; adjust for renal function.
Safety
- Contraindications: Potassium in hyperkalemia or significant renal failure; calcium with caution in digoxin toxicity.
- Black box warning: None.
- Interactions: Potassium with ACE inhibitors, ARBs, potassium-sparing diuretics, and salt substitutes (hyperkalemia).
- Pregnancy / lactation: Used as needed.
- High-alert: Yes (IV potassium chloride and IV magnesium).
Adverse effects
- Common side effects: Oral potassium GI upset; infusion-site burning with IV potassium.
- Serious effects to report: Cardiac arrhythmias from too-fast potassium or hyperkalemia, magnesium toxicity (loss of reflexes, respiratory depression), calcium extravasation.
- Antidote / reversal: Calcium for magnesium toxicity; insulin and dextrose and other measures for hyperkalemia.
Nursing process
- Assessment before administration: Serum level, renal function, ECG, urine output, IV site.
- Interventions during therapy: Always dilute IV potassium and use a pump (never push); monitor ECG; give oral potassium with food and full water; check renal function and urine output first.
- Monitor: Serum electrolytes, ECG, renal function, IV site, reflexes (magnesium).
- Evaluation / expected outcome: Corrected electrolyte level.
Patient teaching
- Patient teaching: Take oral potassium with food and a full glass of water; do not crush extended-release potassium; report palpitations.
- Notify provider if: Palpitations, muscle weakness, IV-site pain, decreased urination.
- Administration tips: IV potassium always diluted and pumped, never pushed; high-alert double-check.