Unilateral Upper Extremity Paralysis Secondary to Hypokalemia and Fasting: A Case Report
Alexander Adler, Samy Shelbaya, Sean McCormick

TL;DR
A 19-year-old man developed right-hand paralysis due to low potassium levels linked to fasting during Ramadan, highlighting the need to consider metabolic causes before neurological ones.
Contribution
This case report highlights the rare presentation of unilateral paralysis due to hypokalemia, emphasizing the importance of metabolic evaluation before neurological imaging.
Findings
The patient's unilateral hand weakness was caused by severe hypokalemia (2.4 mmol/L).
Symptoms resolved after potassium repletion, confirming the metabolic etiology.
Fasting during Ramadan may have contributed to the hypokalemia.
Abstract
Paralysis from hypokalemia commonly presents with generalized weakness; however, in rare cases it may present with unilateral or focal symptoms. Unilateral paralysis in hypokalemia is particularly challenging due to its mimicry of central nervous system (CNS) disorders such as ischemic stroke. Patients often undergo extensive and costly neuroimaging before a metabolic etiology is recognized. A 19-year-old male presented to the emergency department reporting an abrupt onset of inability to hold things in his right hand. He denied any precipitating factors but did note that he was fasting for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. On exam, the patient was seen to have absent grip strength in the right hand. The patient’s metabolic panel showed hypokalemia with a potassium of 2.4 millimoles per liter (mmol/L) (reference range: 3.5 to 5.2 mmol/L). Following neurology consultation, we determined…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurological and metabolic disorders · Ion channel regulation and function
