Management of Rhabdomyolysis
Immediately initiate aggressive intravenous fluid resuscitation with isotonic saline targeting a urine output of 300 mL/hour, discontinue all causative agents, and monitor potassium levels every 6-12 hours to prevent life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias. 1
Immediate Diagnostic Workup
Upon suspicion of rhabdomyolysis, obtain the following laboratory tests immediately:
- Creatine kinase (CK) - diagnosis is established when CK is ≥5-10 times the upper limit of normal (≥975-1000 IU/L) 2, 1
- Comprehensive metabolic panel including creatinine, BUN, electrolytes (particularly potassium), glucose, calcium, and phosphorus 2
- Urinalysis for myoglobinuria - look for brown/dark urine that is positive for blood without red blood cells present 2
- ECG immediately to assess for arrhythmias related to hyperkalemia 2
- Arterial blood gas to assess for metabolic acidosis, which commonly occurs in severe cases 2
- Complete blood count with differential to evaluate for infection or systemic processes 2
Severity Stratification
Classify the severity to guide fluid resuscitation volume:
- Mild: CK <15,000 IU/L with normal renal function and no significant electrolyte abnormalities 2
- Moderate: CK 15,000-50,000 IU/L with mild renal dysfunction, requiring 3-6L fluid resuscitation per day 3, 2
- Severe: CK >50,000 IU/L with acute kidney injury, requiring >6L fluid resuscitation per day 3, 2, 1
Aggressive Fluid Resuscitation Protocol
This is the cornerstone of management and delays are associated with dramatically higher acute kidney injury risk 1:
- Initiate isotonic saline (0.9% NaCl) immediately upon diagnosis 1
- Target urine output of 300 mL/hour to facilitate myoglobin clearance and prevent renal tubular obstruction 3, 1, 4
- Continue IV fluids until CK <1,000 U/L with daily trending 2
- Monitor urine output hourly to ensure adequate renal perfusion 2
The evidence does not support routine use of bicarbonate, mannitol, or loop diuretics for improved outcomes 4.
Critical Electrolyte Management
Hyperkalemia is the most immediately life-threatening complication, capable of precipitating cardiac arrhythmias, pulseless electrical activity, and cardiac arrest 1:
- Check potassium levels every 6-12 hours in severe cases 2, 1
- Correct significant hyperkalemia emergently using standard protocols (calcium gluconate for cardiac membrane stabilization, insulin/glucose, beta-agonists, and consider dialysis for refractory cases) 1
- Monitor calcium and phosphorus for hypocalcemia and hyperphosphatemia 2
- Trend CK, creatinine, and electrolytes daily until CK is declining and renal function is stable 3
Immediate Medication Review and Discontinuation
Discontinue all causative agents immediately 3, 1:
- Statins and other lipid-lowering agents (most common drug cause with incidence of 1.6 per 100,000 patient-years) 3
- Dietary supplements: red yeast rice containing lovastatin, creatine monohydrate, wormwood oil, licorice, and Hydroxycut 3
- NSAIDs - avoid entirely due to nephrotoxic effects in patients already at high risk for acute kidney injury 3
- Succinylcholine - particularly important in perioperative or intubated patients 3, 1
Compartment Syndrome Surveillance
Maintain extremely high suspicion for compartment syndrome, which can both cause and complicate rhabdomyolysis 3, 1:
- Early signs: pain, tension, paresthesia, and paresis 3
- Late signs: pulselessness and pallor (often indicate irreversible damage) 3
- Perform early fasciotomy when compartment pressure exceeds 30 mmHg or when differential pressure (diastolic BP minus compartment pressure) is <30 mmHg 3, 1
Pain Management Strategy
Use a stepwise approach that avoids nephrotoxic agents:
- First-line: Acetaminophen 500-1000 mg (onset 15-30 minutes, maximum 4-6 grams daily) - avoids nephrotoxic effects 3, 1
- Avoid all NSAIDs (ibuprofen, ketoprofen, diclofenac, naproxen, mefenamic acid) due to gastrointestinal and renal toxicity 3
- For severe pain unresponsive to acetaminophen: oral morphine 20-40 mg for opioid-naive patients 3
- If acute kidney injury with eGFR <30 mL/min: use fentanyl or buprenorphine as safest opioid choices 3
Etiology-Specific Testing for Recurrent Cases
If the patient has recurrent rhabdomyolysis, exercise intolerance, or family history of neuromuscular disorders 5:
- Genetic testing: RYR1 and CACNA1S gene sequencing for malignant hyperthermia susceptibility 3
- Metabolic myopathy testing: CPT2, PYGM, ACADM, AMPD1, and VLCAD gene testing 3
- Autoimmune markers: ANA, anti-CCP, rheumatoid factor, and myositis-specific antibodies if autoimmune myositis suspected 2
- Additional muscle enzymes: LDH, AST, ALT, and aldolase 3
Renal Replacement Therapy Indications
Consider dialysis for specific complications rather than prophylactically 1:
- Refractory hyperkalemia unresponsive to medical management
- Severe metabolic acidosis
- Progressive acute kidney injury despite adequate hydration
- Persistently elevated CK despite adequate fluid resuscitation
Special Considerations for Intubated/ICU Patients
- Prolonged immobilization during mechanical ventilation creates sustained pressure on muscle groups, particularly during prone positioning 1
- Maintain 35-degree head-up positioning when possible to reduce airway swelling and improve venous drainage 1
- Sedative and paralytic medications prevent position changes and mask early symptoms 1
Critical Pitfalls to Avoid
- Delaying fluid resuscitation is the single most important error, associated with dramatically higher acute kidney injury risk 1
- Inadequate fluid volume (<6L/day in severe cases) fails to prevent renal complications 1
- Missing compartment syndrome in traumatic or severe cases leads to irreversible damage 1
- Failing to monitor and correct hyperkalemia can result in sudden cardiac arrest 1
- Using the 1.5 mg/dL creatinine threshold as a trigger for intervention - this is specific to cirrhotic patients and not applicable to rhabdomyolysis 3
- Assuming CK has peaked at initial presentation - CK levels peak 24-120 hours after the inciting event, so early levels may still be rising 3
Admission Criteria
Most patients require hospitalization 4. Admit patients with:
- CK >15,000 IU/L (moderate to severe disease)
- Any degree of renal dysfunction
- Significant electrolyte abnormalities
- Immunocompromised state
- Mental confusion or altered mentation
- Evidence of compartment syndrome
- Specific organ failure 3