“…The reduction in total exchangeable potassium may be, in the main, an indication of a loss of lean body mass as part of wasting which may be occult (Walesby et al, 1978) or evident in the extreme as 'cardiac cachexia', but local critical reductions in intracellular K concentration cannot 316 be excluded (Hamer, 1977). The plasma potassium seems to be part of a labile component of the body potassium which varies without relation to total body stores (Croxson et al, 1972;Nagant de Deuxchaisnes and Mach, 1974;Nicholls et al, 1976) and cannot be used to predict potassium depletion. Plasma potassium may be relatively easily maintained by dietary supplements or aldosterone antagonists with relatively little effect on tissue potassium (White, 1970;Croxson et al, 1972;Davidson and Gillebrand, 1973;Kremer et al, 1977).…”