Discharge Instructions: Eating a High Potassium Diet
Discharge Instructions: Eating a High-Potassium Diet
Your healthcare provider has told you to eat a high-potassium diet. This may be because you have low levels of potassium in your blood. Or it may be because you have high blood pressure. Potassium is found in many foods. These include dairy products, nuts, seeds, and beans. It’s also found in many fruits and vegetables in high amounts.
Guidelines for a high-potassium diet
Eat fruits and vegetables in their fresh or raw form most often.
Check labels for ingredients that have potassium. This includes potassium chloride. Add these items to your diet.
Try salt substitutes. Many of these have potassium.
Avoid licorice. This includes licorice root and teas that have licorice. These can reduce potassium levels in your body.
Eat plenty of the following high-potassium foods:
Fruits. Good choices are apricots (canned and fresh), bananas, cantaloupe, honeydew melon, kiwi, nectarines, oranges, orange juice, and pears. Dried fruits include apricots, dates, figs, and prunes. Prune juice also has potassium.
Vegetables. Good choices are asparagus, avocado, artichoke, broccoli, bamboo shoots, beets, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, celery, chard, okra, potatoes (white and sweet), pumpkin, rutabaga, spinach (cooked), squash, and tomatoes. Tomato sauce, tomato juice, and vegetable juice cocktail are also good choices.
Chicken, fish, clams, and crab
Milk, chocolate milk, buttermilk, and soy milk
Legumes. These include black-eyed peas, chickpeas, lentils, lima beans, navy beans, red kidney beans, soybeans, and split peas.
Nuts and seeds. Try almonds, Brazil nuts, cashews, peanuts, peanut butter, pecans, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, and walnuts.
Breads and cereals. These include bran and whole-grain products.
Others foods include chocolate, cocoa, coconut milk, and molasses
Follow-up
Make a follow-up appointment for a repeat test.
When to call your healthcare provider
Call your healthcare provider right away or go to the ER if you have any of the following:
Vomiting
Extreme tiredness (fatigue)
Diarrhea
Rapid, irregular heartbeat
Shortness of breath
Chest pain
Muscle cramps, spasms, or twitching
Weakness
Paralysis
Updated:  
November 12, 2017
Sources:  
High Potassium Foods. UpToDate.
Reviewed By:  
Horowitz, Diane, MD,Wilkins, Joanna, RD, CD