Diabetic ketoacidosis: Difference between revisions

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====IV Insulin Regimen:====
====IV Insulin Regimen:====
#Initial dose 0.1units/kg/hr of insulin
#Initial dose 0.1units/kg/hr of insulin
#When BS <200, reduce to 0.02-0.05 U/kg/hr IV OR give subQ 0.1 U/kg q2hr and switch IV fluids to D10<sub>0.45%</sub>NS at 100cc/hr
#When BS <200, reduce to 0.02-0.05 U/kg/hr IV OR give subQ 0.1 U/kg q2hr and switch IV fluids to D5<sub>0.45%</sub>NS at 150cc/hr
#Maintain BS between 150 and 200 until resolution of DKA  
#Maintain BS between 150 and 200 until resolution of DKA  
#Continue IV infusion for 2 hrs after subcutaneous insulin tx is begun  
#Continue IV infusion for 2 hrs after subcutaneous insulin tx is begun  

Revision as of 04:50, 29 April 2014

Background

Epidemiology

The mortality rate of DKA since the advent of insulin is approximately 2-5%[1]

Pathophysiology

Definition
  1. Hyperglycemia (glucose > 250 mg/dl)
  2. Acidosis (pH < 7.3)
  3. Ketosis

Hyperglycemia

  • Leads to osmotic diuresis and depletion of electrolytes including sodium, magnesium, calcium and phosphorous.
  • Further dehydration impairs glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and contributes to acute renal failure

Acidosis

  • Due to lipolysis / accumulation of of ketoacids (represented by anion gap)
  • Compensatory respiratory alkalosis
  • Breakdown of adipose creates first acetoacetate leading to conversion to beta-hydroxybutyrate

Dehydration

  • Causes Renin system activation in addition to the osmotic diuresis
  • Cation loss (in exchange for chloride) worsens metabolic acidosis

Causes

  1. Insulin or oral hypoglycemic medication non-compliance
  2. Infection
  3. Cardiac Ischemia
  4. Intra-abdominal infections
  5. Steroid use
  6. ETOH Abuse
  7. Drug abuse
  8. Pregnancy
  9. Hyperthyroidism
  10. GI Hemorrhage

History

  • Perform a thorough neurologic exam since Cerebral Edema increases mortality significantly especially in children
  • Assess prior history of DKA or hyperglycemic episodes
  • Is there associated infection?
  • Is there another associated illnesses or risk factors
  • Has the patient been compliant with insulin use?
  • Any recent medications started which could cause DKA

Workup

  • CBC
  • Chem 10
  • UA
  • Serum ketones: Beta-hydroxybutrate, acetoacetate
  • hCG
  • ECG
  • VBG (equivalent to ABG for assessment of acid-base status)[2][3]
    • Venous pH ~ 0.03 lower than arterial pH
    • Verify that respiratory compensation is as expected
  • Chest xray is indicated if exam concerning for respiratory source of infection

Diagnosis

  1. Blood Sugar>250
  2. AG>12
  3. Bicarb <15
  4. pH <7.2
  5. ketonemia and ketonuria
  • BS may be lower if there is impaired gluconeogenesis (liver failure patients or severe alcoholics)
  • Bicarb may be normal if there is concurrent alkalosis (e.g. vomiting)
    • In this case an elevated gap may be the only clue with anion gaps > 18 in severe ketonemia

Treatment

Volume Repletion

  • Most important step in treatment since osmotic diuresis is the major driving force[2]
  • Administer 20-30cc/kg bolus during the first hour
  • Most adult patients are 3-6L depleted
  • Hyponatremia is a result of dilution. Start Normal Saline @ 250-500ml/hr
  • If Hypernatremic then consider starting 1/2NS @ 250-500ml/hr after initial fluid bolus
  • When blood sugar(BS) < 250 switch to D51/2NS@ 150-200 ml/hr(+/- KCl)

Insulin

  • Check Potassium prior to insulin treatment![4]
  • If K <3.5mEq/L do not administer insulin. If the potassium is < 5.5 mEq/L but > 3.5 mEq/L, then start potassium repletion along with your insulin.[5]
  • Insulin is required to stop the ketosis but a a bolus dose is unnecessary and may contribute to increased hypoglycemic episodes[6]
  • Expect BS to fall by 50-100 mg/dL per hr if you administer 0.1units/kg/hr of insulin
  • Refractory hyperglycemia may be due to an associated infectious process contributing to the DKAn

IV Insulin Regimen:

  1. Initial dose 0.1units/kg/hr of insulin
  2. When BS <200, reduce to 0.02-0.05 U/kg/hr IV OR give subQ 0.1 U/kg q2hr and switch IV fluids to D50.45%NS at 150cc/hr
  3. Maintain BS between 150 and 200 until resolution of DKA
  4. Continue IV infusion for 2 hrs after subcutaneous insulin tx is begun
  5. SubQ route (appropriate only for mild DKA)
Do not stop insulin infusion until AG normalized AND bicarb normalized

SubQ(SC) Insulin Regimen:[7]

1hr Protocol
  1. Initial dose SC Aspart: 0.3 units/kg body wt, followed by
    1. SC aspart insulin at 0.1 units/kg every hour
    2. When blood glucose <250 mg/dl (13.8 mmol/l), change IV fluids to D5 0.45% saline and reduce SC aspart insulin to 0.05

units/kg/hr to keep glucose at 150mg/dl (11 mmol/l) until resolution of DKA.

2hr Protocol
  1. Initial dose SC Aspart: 0.3 units/kg body wt, followed by
    1. SC aspart insulin at 0.2 units/kg 1 hr later followed by Q2hr dosing
    2. When blood glucose <250 mg/dl (13.8 mmol/l), change IV fluids to D5 0.45% saline and reduce SC aspart insulin to 0.05

units/kg/hr to keep glucose at 150mg/dl (11 mmol/l) until resolution of DKA.

Electrolyte Repletion

  1. Potassium repletion is most important
  2. Sodium – Serum concentration diluted as a result of osmotic gradient of glucose pulling more water into extracellular space.
  3. Hypophosphatemia: If < 1.0 mEq/L, start repletion.
    1. Severe hypophosphatemia can cause cardiac and respiratory dysfunction
  4. Hypomagnesemia – All patients who are hypokalemic are hypomagnesemic. Replete together as long as kidney function intact.

Bicarb

  • No benefit has been demonstrated from Sodium Bicarbonate therapy in acidosis cause by DKA[8]
  • Adding sodium bicarb to a patient's fluids requires to increase the respiratory rate to expel the converted CO2
  • Patients with DKA generally have maximally elevated respiratory rates and cannot increase. The bicarbonate administration then further increases the patient's acidoses. [9][10]

DKA Refractory to Treatment

Assess for other causes of DKA


Labs/Monitoring

  • Glucose check Q1hr
  • Chem 10 Q4hr (initially Q2hr)
  • Check pH prn based on clinical status (eval respiratory compensation)
  • Check appropriateness of insulin dose Q1hr (see below)
  • Corrected Electrolytes

Complications

Cerebral Edema

    • Almost all affected pts are <20yr
  • Associated with initial bicarb level; not rate of glucose drop
  • Symptoms:
  • Headache
  • Incontinence
  • Mental Status Change / Seizure
  • Treatment should be performed in conjunction with primary team recommendations[11]
  • Mannitol IV 1-2gm/kg OR
  • 3% NS 5-10mL/kg over 30min
  • Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema

Sliding Scale

Insulin Sliding Scale

Treatment Algorithm

See Also

Source

  1. Lebovitz HE: Diabetic ketoacidosis. Lancet 1995; 345: 767-772.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Savage MW, Datary KK, Culvert A, Ryman G, Rees JA, Courtney CH, Hilton L, Dyer PH, Hamersley MS; Joint British Diabetes Societies. Joint British Diabetes Societies guideline for the management of diabetic ketoacidosis. Diabet Med. 2011 May;28(5):508-15.
  3. Gokel, Yuksel; Paydas, Saime; Koseoglu, Zikret; Alparslan, Nazan; Seydaoglu, Gulsah: Comparison of Blood Gas and Acid-Base Measurements in Arterial and Venous Blood Samples in Patients with Uremic Acidosis and Diabetic Ketoacidosis in the Emergency Room. American Journal of Nephrology 2000; 20:319-323.
  4. Aurora S, Cheng D, Wyler B, Menchine M. Prevalence of hypokalemia in ED patients with diabetic ketoacidosis. Am J Emerg Med 2012; 30: 481-4.
  5. *http://emupdates.com/2010/07/15/correction-of-critical-hypokalemia/
  6. Goyal N, Miller J, Sankey S, Mossallam U. Utility of Initial Bolus insulin in the treatment of diabetic ketoacidosis. Journal of Emergency Medicine, Vol 20:10, p30.
  7. Umpierrez G. et al. Treatment of diabetic ketoacidosis with subcutaneous insulin aspart. Diabetes Care. 2004 Aug;27(8):1873-8 [PDF http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/27/8/1873.full.pdf]
  8. EBQ:Sodium Bicarbonate use in DKA
  9. Villon A, Zuni F, Plafond P et al. Does bicarbonate therapy improve management of severe diabetic ketoacidosis? Crit Care Med 1999; 27: 2690-2693.
  10. Okuda Y, Drogue HJ, Field JB et al. Counterproductive effects of sodium bicarbonate in diabetic ketoacidosis. J Clinical Endocrinology Metabolism 1996; 81: 314-320.
  11. Dunger DB, Sperling MA, Acerini CL, et al. (February 2004). "European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology/Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrine Society consensus statement on diabetic ketoacidosis in children and adolescents". Pediatrics 113 (2): e133–40. doi:10.1542/peds.113.2.e133. PMID 14754983.