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Практическое

Transtubular Potassium Gradient (TTKG)

TTKG — Transtubular Potassium Gradient

Подробное руководство скоро

Мы работаем над подробным учебным руководством для Transtubular Potassium Gradient (TTKG). Вернитесь позже для пошаговых объяснений, формул, реальных примеров и экспертных советов.

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Совет профессионала

When TTKG is borderline or the validity criteria are marginal, calculate FEK+ alongside it: FEK+ (%) = (Urine K+ × Plasma Cr) / (Plasma K+ × Urine Cr) × 100. FEK+ > 20% suggests renal K+ wasting in hypokalaemia; FEK+ < 10% in hyperkalaemia suggests inadequate renal excretion. The two indices together provide greater diagnostic confidence.

Сложность:Средний

Знаете ли вы?

The TTKG concept was introduced by David Ethier and Michael Kamel in a landmark 1990 paper in the American Journal of Kidney Diseases. Before its publication, clinicians had to rely on 24-hour urine potassium collections — a cumbersome, day-long process — to determine whether the kidneys were appropriately handling potassium. The TTKG allowed a definitive answer from a single paired blood and urine sample, fundamentally simplifying the work-up of complex electrolyte disorders.

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Reviewed May 2026
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