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Potassium-related inherited tubulopathies
Authors:D Landau
Institution:(1) Department of Pediatrics ‘A’, Soroka University Medical Center, Ben Gurion University of the Negev., P.O. Box 151, Beer-Sheva, 84101, Israel
Abstract:Hyper- and hypokalemia may carry severe clinical consequences. Different regulatory mechanisms, including the kidney, exert a tight regulation of plasma potassium levels. The renal pathway of potassium handling begins in the proximal tubule followed by the fine-tuning of its secretion or absorption at the distal tubule, including the thick ascending limb of Henle’s loop, the distal convoluted tubule and the cortical collecting duct. Genetic studies in recent years have clarified the role of specific tubular channels and transporters in the pathogenesis of unique hyper- and hypokalemic tubulopathies, some of them non-hypertensive (pseudohypoaldosteronism, Bartter and Gitelman syndromes) and others hypertensive by definition (including Liddle and Gordon syndromes). This article reviews the genetic and clinical spectrum of hypokalemic and hyperkalemic tubulopathies. Received 13 January 2006; received after revision 19 March 2006; accepted 18 May 2006
Keywords:Bartter syndrome  Gitelman syndrome  loop of Henle  Liddle syndrome  Gordon syndrome  aldosterone
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