Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To report and describe the apparent first case of hyperkalemia following intramuscular administration of ketorolac and to discuss the proposed mechanism of action.
PATIENT:
The patient was a 59-year-old man who developed hyperkalemia following a right upper lobectomy; he had received an intramuscular injection of ketorolac 30 mg for incisional pain.
RESULTS:
All possible causes of the hyperkalemia, including other drugs and intraoperative and postoperative events, were thoroughly evaluated and ruled out. Hyperkalemia has been reported in patients who have received other nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). The proposed mechanism of action for the occurrence of this hyperkalemia appears to be related to the suppression of prostaglandin synthesis.
CONCLUSIONS:
Considering the temporal sequence of events and drugs administered prior to the hyperkalemia in this patient and the hyperkalemic potential associated with other NSAIDs, ketorolac appears to be the precipitating agent. The possibility of hyperkalemia associated with the parenteral use of ketorolac may warrant practitioners to closely monitor the blood chemistry of patients receiving this agent.
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