When I was a new and shiny graduate from the AECC maybe less than five years old, if patients told me the GP had diagnosed them with gout, I would have accepted it, no questions asked.

But I learned that it’s always a good idea to actually check the symptoms fit the diagnosis and to make sure a blood test has actually been done to confirm raised uric acid.

Quite a few times turns out, the symptoms sounded sod all like gout and there was no blood test.

But they were stuck on an NSAID and allopurinol regardless and months later there they remained.

So when my mum told me the GP had diagnosed her with gout, I was suspicious, to say the least.

But there it was a red swollen first metatarsal phalangeal joint and raised uric acid on her blood test.

My Mum has had some health concerns over the years and as a consequence takes several blood-pressure medications (despite my best efforts to wean her off and reassure her that blood pressure under 140/90 isn’t always possible with natural ageing without a lot of drugs).

I have also pointed out that according to the research if you bring blood pressure down from 150-159/90-99 for primary prevention, they get zero overall improvements in cardiovascular events, none. But 9% chance of harm by side-effects.

https://www.thennt.com/nnt/anti-hypertensives-for-cardiovascular-prevention-in-mild-hypertension/

I would argue that what used to be considered natural ageing is now considered a “disease”.

Anyhoo……in this case it turns out that one of the drugs, indapamide, raises uric acid and thus can cause gout.

This is well known and GP’s should be monitoring potassium levels.

But this doesn’t always happen (hence why you should ALWAYS get the patient to request their blood tests and check it), plus the NHS has a very wide range of “normal”, and we want optimal and to spot a trend down before frank hypokalaemia.

For me I like to see it between 4-5 mmol/L, NHS is interested if it drops below 3-3.5 mmol/L ish depending on the lab.

Gout is pretty easy to spot, but as potassium is a key electrolyte involved in a lot of neurology & muscle control it can be a much more insidious, vague onset and hard to spot.

Also low intake of potassium is very common, 98 % of Americans don’t meet the recommended daily intake.

It is mainly found in fruit and vegetables, and let’s face it some of our patients think chips count as one of their five a day (FYI it should be 8 veg a day, minimum).

So with an NRV/RDA of around 4.7g (4700 mg) it can be quite hard to keep levels optimal.

The symptoms of low potassium can include:

Weakness and fatigue

Muscle cramps

Digestive problems – bloating and constipation (less bowel muscle contraction)

Heart palpitations/arrhythmia (how ironic)

Muscle aches and stiffness

Tingling and numbness

Mood disorders (up to 20% of patients had potassium deficiency in one study of acute psychiatric patients)

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0163834309000425

If you look at the side effect list on indapamide you will see there is a lot of overlap.

This is a really important concept, when you look up drug side effects they occur because of a deficiency-induced by the drug or the drug inhibits something or is toxic in some way.

Thus we can in many but not all cases stop or reduce the side effects by supplementing and changing diet.

If you need to use potassium as a supplement use citrate, it is cheap and also alkalinises the tissues too. I usually suggest around 500 mg daily and make sure they ask the GP to retest the levels at some point.

ACTIONS TO TAKE:

– Always find out exactly which meds your patient is taking, “blood pressure tablets” isn’t good enough, you are a clinician, not a therapist (deal with it or de-register).

–  If they are on indapamide, get the patient to request the blood test results, check the potassium, and as needed increase plants high in potassium https://draxe.com/nutrition/top-10-potassium-rich-foods/.  It’s often easiest to give a potassium citrate supplement.

– Never criticise my Mum’s diet, she f***ing hates it.

And as always don’t waste those valuable adjustments,