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- Charly Gaul, Georg Leonhardt, Antje Spens, Ulrich Schneyer, and Stephan Zierz.
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Neurologie, Martin-Luther-Universität, Halle-Wittenberg. Charly.Gaul@gmx.de
- Med Klin. 2005 Sep 15; 100 (9): 583-6.
BackgroundDifferential diagnosis of acute tetraparesis includes paraplegia caused by trauma, ischemia, inflammation or tumor, Guillain-Barré syndrome, periodic paralysis, myasthenia gravis, and dissociative paralysis.Case ReportThe case of a 45-year-old man is reported who noticed weakness of both legs after heavy labor. In the evening he was unable to climb stairs, at night he noticed additional weakness in both arms and dyspnea. After transfer to the authors' department profound tetraparesis, tachycardia and slight dyspnea were found on examination. Cranial nerve examination was unremarkable. Deep tendon reflexes, however, were only slightly diminished. Laboratory work-up revealed hypokalemia (potassium 1.9 mmol/l) and hyperthyreosis. Elevated TRAK and TPO antibodies as well as sonography and scintigraphy of the thyroid gland gave evidence of Graves' disease. After intravenous administration of potassium tetraparesis resolved completely.ConclusionHypokalemic thyrotoxic periodic paralysis (HTPP), a subtype of hypokalemic paralysis, is unusual in Caucasians. In Asian men the disease is more common. The underlying mechanism is an extra-intracellular shift of potassium in the voluntary muscle cells. In contrast to hereditary autosomal dominant paralyses, a genetic defect is not known. Usually, symptoms of hyperthyreosis in HTPP are mild which can hamper the correct diagnosis.
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