Hyperkalemia unresponsive to massive doses of aldosterone and renal tubular acidosis in a patient with chronic interstitial nephritis: clinical and experimental studies.

1976 
: A unique 53-year-old male patient is described in whom aldosterone-refractory hyperkalemia and renal tubular acidosis/RTA/ was due to chronic interstitial nephritis associated with peritubular hyaline deposits in the distal nephron. Hyperkalemia was not caused by an adrenal disorder or acidosis and could not be abolished by interventions enhancing K clearance; saline infusions, high doses of furosemide, cortisone, cortisol, long-acting synthetic ACTH and excessive doses of aldosterone. Glucocorticoids induced a marked decrease in sodium excreting capacity probably by an action on the ascending limb of Henle's loop while aldosterone elicited a paradoxical natriuretic response by unknown mechanism. The results of our experimental studies carried out on the hyperkalemic RTA patient as well as on various control subjects and patients suggest 1. a specific defect in renal K excretion associated with decreased aldosterone responsiveness of the tubules presumably due to the peritubular pathology, and 2. a disturbance in the cellular regulation of K distribution between fluid compartments of unknown origin.
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