Potassium chloride 0.15% (potassium 10mmol/500ml) / Sodium chloride 0.9% infusion 500ml polyethylene bottles
Requires a prescription from a doctor or prescriber
Electrolyte solution for infusion to treat low blood pressure or low blood volume
Official documents, adverse reaction reporting, and safety monitoring
Report a side effect
Submit a Yellow Card report to the MHRA
Official medicine documents
Yellow Card
Report side effects (MHRA)
Drug safety updates
MHRA alerts for Potassium chloride + Sodium chloride
Safety monitoring data
Yellow Card reports
The MHRA Yellow Card scheme collects reports of suspected side effects from healthcare professionals and patients. View the Drug Analysis Profile (iDAP) for real-world adverse reaction data.
View Drug Analysis Profile
Browse all Drug Analysis Profiles A–Z
Browse all iDAP reports
Interactive Drug Analysis Profiles for all medicines
Report a side effect
Submit a Yellow Card report to the MHRA
Data from the MHRA Yellow Card scheme. A reported reaction does not necessarily mean the medicine caused it. Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
EudraVigilance
The European Medicines Agency (EMA) collects suspected adverse reaction reports from across the EU/EEA through the EudraVigilance system. Search for safety data on this medicine.
Search EudraVigilance database
Browse substances A–Z in the European adverse reaction database
About EudraVigilance
Learn about EU pharmacovigilance and safety monitoring
EudraVigilance data is published by the European Medicines Agency (EMA). A suspected adverse reaction is not necessarily caused by the medicine.
1 branded products available
MHRA licensed products
View all licensed products for Potassium chloride + Sodium chloride on the MHRA register
Potassium chloride 0.15% (potassium 10mmol/500ml) / Sodium chloride 0.9% infusion 500ml polyethylene bottles
Therapeutically similar medicines
Similarity is based on WHO Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification and on a factual NHS dm+d therapeutic-grouping code prefix. Source data: NHS dm+d via TRUD (OGL v3.0), WHO ATC/DDD Index.
Guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
NICE clinical guidance(11)
Intravenous fluid therapy in adults in hospital (CG174)
Intravenous fluid therapy in children and young people in hospital (NG29)
Diarrhoea and vomiting caused by gastroenteritis in under 5s: diagnosis and management (CG84)
Neonatal parenteral nutrition (NG154)
Diabetes (type 1 and type 2) in children and young people: diagnosis and management (NG18)
Intravenous fluid therapy in adults in hospital (QS66)
Constipation in children and young people: diagnosis and management (CG99)
Acute kidney injury: prevention, detection and management (NG148)
Hypertension in adults: diagnosis and management (NG136)
i STAT CG4+ and CHEM8+ cartridges for point-of-care testing in the emergency department (MIB38)
The NxStage System One NX1000‑1 home haemodialysis device for renal replacement therapy in chronic kidney disease (MIB12)
Source: National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
Check stock at pharmacies and supply information
Pharmacy stock checkers
Search for this medicine at major UK pharmacy chains. These links open the retailer's own website — results depend on their current online catalogue.
Supply & safety information
Official UK regulator monitoring and safety alerts
Pharmacy links redirect to the retailer's own search and do not represent real-time stock levels. Shortage and safety information sourced from MHRA drug safety updates (gov.uk, Crown Copyright under OGL v3.0).
Codes for healthcare professionals and prescribing systems
These codes are used by healthcare IT systems and prescribers to identify this medicine.
NHS UK identifiers
Browse tools
SNOMED CT and dm+d codes from NHS TRUD (Technology Reference data Update Distribution), licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. BNF code shown is the factual mapping value distributed by NHS Business Services Authority (NHSBSA) in the dm+d supplementary file under OGL v3.0; it is not affiliated with, nor licensed from, the publishers of the British National Formulary. ATC codes from the WHO Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology (whocc.no).
Active and completed clinical studies from ClinicalTrials.gov
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM), National Institutes of Health (NIH). Data accessed via ClinicalTrials.gov API v2. Trial information is provided for research purposes and does not constitute medical advice.
Academic studies and reviews for this medicine's active substance
Showing the 50 most relevant studies.
Reviews & meta-analyses: 9 · Randomised trials: 4 · 1938–2026
Showing the 50 most relevant studies, sorted by most relevant.
Lai H, Nesrallah G, Guyatt GH, et al.
2026
- Cardiovascular Diseases
- Hypertension
- Sodium Chloride, Dietary
BackgroundHypertension is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Salt substitutes may reduce sodium intake while maintaining palatability, but comparative effects across formulations remain uncertain.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review and frequentist random-effects network meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials in adults comparing salt substitutes with regular salt, other substitutes or no intervention. Databases (PubMed, Embase, CENTRAL, CNKI, Wanfang), WHO-ICTRP and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched from inception to Oct 3, 2025 (PROSPERO CRD42023451859). We assessed the risk of bias using a modified Cochrane tool and conducted a random-effects network meta-analysis, with evidence certainty evaluated through the GRADE approach.ResultsWe included 34 randomised controlled trials involving 37,063 participants across 15 countries (17 from China, 17 from other countries; mean age 62.3 years). Our results indicate that moderate-potassium and low-sodium salt substitutes (25-40% KCl, 60-79% NaCl) probably reduce all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, non-fatal cardiovascular events and systolic blood pressure (SBP) compared to regular salt, with reductions of 7-17 deaths per 1000 individuals and 4.39-4.64 mmHg for SBP, based on moderate to high certainty evidence. Mortality and cardiovascular benefits are predominantly driven by one large Chinese trial (SSaSS, n = 20,995); excluding this trial eliminated statistical significance for all-cause mortality. Among non-Chinese studies, none contributed mortality data. Substitutes with higher potassium or very low sodium showed similar blood pressure reductions but provided less certain evidence regarding mortality and events. No substitute increased adverse events or withdrawals, and acceptability was comparable to regular salt.ConclusionsSalt substitutes, particularly moderate-potassium and low-sodium formulations, represent a promising sodium reduction strategy. However, current evidence for mortality and cardiovascular event benefits is dominated by one large Chinese trial and has very limited generalisability beyond Chinese populations with high discretionary salt use. These products appear acceptable and safe in people without renal impairment, but clinicians should rule out kidney disease and hyperkalaemia risk before recommending them, and large trials in non-Chinese populations are needed.
Abstract licence: CC BY-NC-ND
Franczyk B, Rysz J, Gluba-Sagr A
2026
Kissock KR, Ghammachi N, Hoek AC, et al.
2026
- Sodium Chloride, Dietary
- Diet, Sodium-Restricted
- Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
John M. Russell
Physiological Reviews, 2000
- Carrier Proteins
- Cell Membrane
- Chlorides
A. Terker, Chong Zhang, Kayla J. Erspamer, et al.
Kidney international, 2016
Jie Yu, S. R. Thout, Qiang Li, et al.
The American journal of clinical nutrition, 2021
Gerhard Giebisch, Erich E. Windhager
The American Journal of Medicine, 1964
- Chlorides
- Cell Biology
- Kidney Tubules
Wouda RD, Karsten M, Michels EHA, et al.
2026
- Potassium
- Sodium
- Natriuresis
Dos Santos ECB, de Souza Lima Bitar Y, Dos Anjos JLM, et al.
2026
- Hypertension
- Potassium Chloride
- Sodium Chloride, Dietary
Duus CL, Nielsen SF, Lyksholm TZ, et al.
2026
- Hypertension
- Nitrates
- Potassium, Dietary
Sources: aggregated from Europe PMC (EMBL-EBI), OpenAlex, Crossref, PubMed and other open scholarly databases. Retracted articles are excluded. Study information is provided for research purposes and does not constitute medical advice.
Structured knowledge from the free knowledge base
Wikipedia article
electrolyte solution for infusion to treat low blood pressure or low blood volume
Read on WikipediaMolecular structure

ATC classifications (Wikidata)
Linked open data from Wikidata (Q2920739), a free and open knowledge base operated by the Wikimedia Foundation. Data is available under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication. Molecular structure images from Wikimedia Commons.
Scientific data (pharmacology, interactions, ADME) is not yet available for this medicine. Clinical sections are sourced from the NHS dm+d database.