Clinical Endocrine Cases Flashcards

1
Q

What is bolus insulin?

A

“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”).

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2
Q

3 guidelines for diagnosis of T2DM

A

FPG >/ 126 mg/dl

2-hr. plasma glucose >/ 200 mg/dl during a 75 g OGTT

HbA1C >/ 6.5%

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3
Q

5 etiologies of DKA

A

Poor insulin control

Infection: pneumonia, UTI, GE, sepsis

Infarction

Surgery

Drugs - cocaine

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4
Q

What type of acidosis occurs in DKA?

A

High anion gap metabolic acidosis (MUDPILES)

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5
Q

What is the 1-2-3 rule for fluid replacement in DKA? (3)

How much is the deficit usually?

A
  1. 2-3 L of NS (0.9%) over first 1-3 hrs. (5-10 ml/kg/hr).
  2. Then, half strength saline (0.45%) at 150 ml/hr.
  3. When glucose reaches 250 mg/dl, switch to 5% dextrose and 0.45% saline at 100-200 ml/hr.

Usually 3-5 L

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6
Q

How is regular insulin administered in DKA? (3)

A
  1. 10-20 units IV or IM.
  2. Then, 5-10 units/hr. continuous IV.
  3. Increase if no response in 1-2 hrs. - orders can be written w/ guidelines to titrate.
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7
Q

At what point should you consider K+ replacement in DKA?

When supplementing, what 3 things must be kept in mind?

A

K+ < 5.5 mEq/L

Renal function
Baseline EKG for monitoring
Verifying urine output and measure hourly - likely will need urinary catheter initially

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8
Q

DKA treatment goals (3)

A

Increase rate of glucose utilization in insulin-dependent tissues: 150-250 mEq/dL

Reverse ketonemia and acidosis

Correct water depletion and electrolytes

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9
Q

When should you begin intermediate or long-acting insulin in DKA? (2)

What must occur between time of administration of IV and SQ insulin?

A
  1. When patient is able to eat shown by the following:
    - mental status improved
    - no N/V
    - no abdominal pain
  2. Anion gap normalized

Allow overlap timing of IV w/ SQ insulin: usually by 30-60 min.

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10
Q

What symptoms of DKA are often absent in NKHS?

What are 2 components specific to NKHS?

A

N/V, abdominal pain and Kussmaul respirations.

Fluid deficit is bigger in NKHS.
Some drugs may contribute to NKHS.

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11
Q

Fluid replacement in NKHS (2)

What is the fluid deficit usually?

A

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

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12
Q

What type of insulin is used in NKHS?

A

Regular insulin - IV or IM. Transition when eating, same as DKA.

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13
Q

Lower A1C is usually good, but tighter control might lead to…

A

Lows that cause syncope and increased risk of falls.

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14
Q

Earliest measurable sign of proteinuria and diabetic effect of nephropathy is…

A

Microalbuminuria: 30-300 mg

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15
Q

Quarterly evaluation of DM includes: (3)

Annual evaluation (3)

A

Quarterly

  • HbA1C
  • review of self-glucose monitoring (look at log if possible)
  • foot inspection

Annual

  • dilated eye exam
  • urine protein screen
  • monofilament testing
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16
Q

Cause of tertiary thyroid disorders

A

HPA dysfunction

17
Q

What is Euthyroid Sick?

What might cause it?

What should you be cautioned about?

A

Critically ill patient whose lab results don’t fit a primary, secondary or tertiary pattern.

May be due to protein shifts, protective effect of decreased metabolism or maladaptive process.

Caution interpreting thyroid testing and treatment in this situation.

18
Q

When should you do an FNA of a thyroid nodule?

A

If only the cause symptoms - otherwise watchful waiting is a good plan.

19
Q

If Ca++ and PO4- levels move the same direction, what should you think is the culprit?

A

Vit. D-related

20
Q

Hypercalcemia of malignancy is evidenced by…

What is the first treatment measure?

A

Mental status changes and/or EKG changes.

Aggressive volume expansion w/ isotonic saline is first measure.