Clinical Endocrine Cases Flashcards
What is bolus insulin?
“Basal” level insulin. It is the long-acting insulin used to make a steady state of glucose. It can be adjusted at mealtime and based on FSG (“sliding scale”).
3 guidelines for diagnosis of T2DM
FPG >/ 126 mg/dl
2-hr. plasma glucose >/ 200 mg/dl during a 75 g OGTT
HbA1C >/ 6.5%
5 etiologies of DKA
Poor insulin control
Infection: pneumonia, UTI, GE, sepsis
Infarction
Surgery
Drugs - cocaine
What type of acidosis occurs in DKA?
High anion gap metabolic acidosis (MUDPILES)
What is the 1-2-3 rule for fluid replacement in DKA? (3)
How much is the deficit usually?
- 2-3 L of NS (0.9%) over first 1-3 hrs. (5-10 ml/kg/hr).
- Then, half strength saline (0.45%) at 150 ml/hr.
- When glucose reaches 250 mg/dl, switch to 5% dextrose and 0.45% saline at 100-200 ml/hr.
Usually 3-5 L
How is regular insulin administered in DKA? (3)
- 10-20 units IV or IM.
- Then, 5-10 units/hr. continuous IV.
- Increase if no response in 1-2 hrs. - orders can be written w/ guidelines to titrate.
At what point should you consider K+ replacement in DKA?
When supplementing, what 3 things must be kept in mind?
K+ < 5.5 mEq/L
Renal function
Baseline EKG for monitoring
Verifying urine output and measure hourly - likely will need urinary catheter initially
DKA treatment goals (3)
Increase rate of glucose utilization in insulin-dependent tissues: 150-250 mEq/dL
Reverse ketonemia and acidosis
Correct water depletion and electrolytes
When should you begin intermediate or long-acting insulin in DKA? (2)
What must occur between time of administration of IV and SQ insulin?
- When patient is able to eat shown by the following:
- mental status improved
- no N/V
- no abdominal pain - Anion gap normalized
Allow overlap timing of IV w/ SQ insulin: usually by 30-60 min.
What symptoms of DKA are often absent in NKHS?
What are 2 components specific to NKHS?
N/V, abdominal pain and Kussmaul respirations.
Fluid deficit is bigger in NKHS.
Some drugs may contribute to NKHS.
Fluid replacement in NKHS (2)
What is the fluid deficit usually?
2-3 L NS over first 1-3 hrs.
When glucose reaches 250 mg/dl, switch to 5% dextrose and 0.45% saline at 100-200 ml/hr.
Usually 8-10 L
What type of insulin is used in NKHS?
Regular insulin - IV or IM. Transition when eating, same as DKA.
Lower A1C is usually good, but tighter control might lead to…
Lows that cause syncope and increased risk of falls.
Earliest measurable sign of proteinuria and diabetic effect of nephropathy is…
Microalbuminuria: 30-300 mg
Quarterly evaluation of DM includes: (3)
Annual evaluation (3)
Quarterly
- HbA1C
- review of self-glucose monitoring (look at log if possible)
- foot inspection
Annual
- dilated eye exam
- urine protein screen
- monofilament testing