Diabetic ketoacidosis
From IDWiki
Definition
- An anion gap acidosis caused by an accumulation of ketone bodies secondary to severe insulin deficiency
Etiology
- Missed insulin (most common cause)
Pathophysiology
- Severe insulin deficiency causes the body to be unable to process glucose for energy, so instead relies on increased fatty acid metabolism, resulting in an accumulation of ketone bodies
- Hyperglycemia creates an osmotic diuresis which causes dehydration
- Insulin deficiency also causes a potassium shift from intra- to extracellular space, combined with the diuresis causes total body potassium depletion
Differential Diagnosis
- DKA
- Hyperglycemia
- Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS/HONK)
Epidemiology
Risk Factors
- Preexisting diagnosis of T1DM
Clinical Presentation
- History
- Thirst/polyuria
- Nausea/vomiting/abdominal pain
- Weakness/malaise
- Change in mental status
- Exam
- Altered mental status
- Kussmaul respiration
- Fever
- Acetone on breath
Investigations
- Glucose q1h
- SMA7 and VBG q2-4h
Management
- Fluid resuscitation (most important)
- Aggressive fluid resuscitation is the best treatment for hyperglycemia
- Usually require 6-10L in first 24 hours
- Insulin therapy treats the ketoacidosis, so don't stop until anion gap resolves
- 0.1-0.2 units/kg/h (6-10 U/kg/h on average)
- Titrate based on anion gap and hyperglycemia
- Potassium supplementation: patients lose about 5mEq/kg when in DKA
- If initial K <3.3, must replace potassium before starting insulin
- Supplement to keep K between 4-5
- Sodium bicarb: consider adding when pH<6.8 or in respiratory failure
- Treat the underlying cause
- Change to subcutaneous insulin when glucose < 15, anion gap resolved (x12+ hours), and patient willing to eat
- Calculate total daily dose from IV rate x 24h, then give that dose as detemir/glargine twice daily (new TDD is twice the IV TDD)
- Overlap with insulin running at half current rae for 6-8 hours after basal insulin