You are on page 1of 4

5 ECG changes of hyperkalaemia

Hyperkalemia (serum K+ > 5.5 mmol/l) is a life-threatening medical emergency. It produces


predictable changes on the ECG/EKG. Recognition of the ECG/EKG changes of hyperkalemia
can save lives. There are five ECG/EKG changes/groups of changes associated with
hyperkalemia which you must be able to recognise.
1. Tall 'tented' T waves
In the presence of hyperkalemia, the T wave on the ECG/EKG rises in amplitude (A, below).
In text books, we are told  that in a given lead, the T wave should be no more than half the
amplitude of the preceding R wave.  In reality, ‘tall’ T waves are quite common on the ECG of
normal individuals, particularly young men ('normal variant' in B  and see our videos
on avoiding error in ECG interpretation on acadoodle.com) . However, you can see that they
differ markedly in morphology (below). If we use the computer to superimpose the 'normal
variant' tall T wave (red T wave, (C)) on those associated with hyperkalemia you can
appreciate the difference. In the case of hyperkalemia, the tall T wave  has a narrow base (C,
black line)  and rises rapidly to a point (C, red arrow). These features are said to result in a
'tented' appearance. The male variant T wave is broad based (D, black line) and does not rise to
a point but rather to a curve at its apex (blue curve). When we superimpose these two T waves
(C) you can see why people say that the hyperkalemic T wave appears to be pinched (black
arrows) in the middle compared to  the normal variant.
2. P wave changes 
Worsening hyperkalemia is associated with progressive flattening of P waves, prolongation
of the PR interval (PR interval > 200 ms) and eventually disappearance of P waves.
Bradycardia is common and AV block may complicate hyperkalemia.

3. Broad QRS complexes


As serum K+ levels rise the qrs complex becomes wider eventually passing the upper limit of
normal. At least think of hyperkalemia if you see this combination of wide qrs complexes
and tall T waves.

4. Development of a sine wave pattern


As K+ levels rise further, the situation is becoming critical. The combination of broadening
QRS complexes and tall T waves produces a sine wave pattern on the ECG readout.
Cardiovascular collapse and death are imminent.
5. Ventricular fibrillation
The end game for untreated hyperkalemia is chaotic depolarisation of ventricular
myocardium: ventricular fibrillation. No cardiac output is present. This situation is not
compatible with life.

You might also like