Diabetic Ketoacidosis Flashcards
What is the mechanism of ketoacidosis?
Normally, the body metabolises carbohydrates, leading to efficient energy production. Ketoacidosis is an alternative metabolic pathway used in starvation states, which is far less efficient, and produces acetone as a byproduct.
What happens in acute ketoacidosis?
There is excessive glucose, but because of a lack of insulin, this cannot be taken up into cells to be metabolised, pushing the body into a starvation-like state where ketoacidosis is the only mechanism of energy production.
Why is acute ketoacidosis medically important?
The combination of severe acidosis and hyperglycaemia can be deadly, and so early recognition and treatment is important
What is the typical presentation of diabetic ketoacidosis?
- Gradual drowsiness
- Vomiting
- Dehydration
What patients should you measure glucose in?
All those with;
- Unexplained vomiting
- Abdominal pain
- Polyuria
- Polydipsia
- Lethargy
- Anorexia
- Ketotic breath
- Dehydration
- Coma
- Deep breathing
What are the triggers for diabetic ketoacidosis?
- Infection
- Surgery
- MI
- Chemotherapy
- Pancreatitis
- Anti-psychotics
- Wrong insulin dose/non-compliance
What are the diagnostic criteria for diabetic ketoacidosis?
- Acidaemia, with a venous blood pH <7.3 or HCO3- <15mmol/L
- Hyperglycaemia, with blood glucose >11mmol/L, or known diabetes mellitus
- Ketonaemia (>3mmol/L), or significant ketonuria (more than 2+ on dipstick)
What investigations should be done in diabetic ketoacidosis?
- ECG
- CXR
- Urine dipstick and MSU
- Capillary and lab glucose
- Blood ketones
- VBG (or ABG if decreased GCS or hypoxia)
- U&E
- Osmolality
- FBC
What are the criteria for a severe DKA?
- Blood ketones >6mmol/L
- Venous bicarbonate <5mmol/L
- Venous/arterial pH <7.0
- K <3.5mmol/L on admission
- GCS <12
- Sats <92% on air (assuming no respiratory disease)
- Systolic BP <90mmHg
- Pulse >100 or <60bpm
- Anion gap above 16
What should be done if a patient presents with severe DKA?
- Consider transfer to HDU/ITU for monitoring and central venous access
- Get senior help
What are the steps in acute management of diabetic ketoacidosis?
- Insert 2 large-bore cannulae
- Start fluid 1L 0.9% saline over 2 hour (if systolic BP <90mmHg, give 500ml bolus over 15 mins and reassess. If systolic BP still <90mmHg, give another 500ml bolus and seek senior review. If still <90mmHg, ICU)
- Venous blood gas for pH and bicarbonate, bedside and lab glucose and ketones, and other tests
- Insulin