Diabetic Ketoacidosis Flashcards

1
Q

Defintion

A

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a serious problem that can happen in people with diabetes if their body starts to run out of insulin. When this happens, harmful substances called ketones build up in the body, which can be life-threatening if it’s not found and treated quickly

Characterised by a biochemical triad of hyperglycaemia, ketonaemia, and acidaemia

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2
Q

Aetiology/Risk factors

A

Can be triggered by an infection or other illness
This can cause your body to produce higher levels of certain hormones, such as adrenaline or cortisol
These hormones can counter the effect of insulin and trigger DKA
Missed insulin/inadequate insulin treatments can also trigger DKA

Risk factors:
Acute infection
MI
Stroke
Pancreatitis
Pregnancy
Trauma 
Drugs (corticosteroids, thiazide diuretics, sympathomimetics, SGLT-2 inhibitors)
Alcohol/drug abuse
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3
Q

Epidemiology

A

Most common among patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus

Less common in type 2 diabetes but can happen

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4
Q

Presenting symptoms

A
Polyuria
Polydipsia
Polyphagia
Nausea and vomiting
Abdominal pain
Weakness or fatigue
Shortness of breath
Fruity-scented breath
Confusion
Palpitations
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5
Q

Signs on physical examination

A
Tachycardia
Hypotension
Reduced skin turgor
Dry mucous membranes
Reduced urine output
Altered consciousness (eg confusion, coma)
Kussmaul breathing

Hyperglycaemia - blood glucose >11.0mmol/L
Ketonaemia - ketones >3.0mmol/L or significant ketonuria
Acidosis - bicarbonate < 15.0mmol/L and/or venous pH < 7.3

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6
Q

Investigations

A
First line:
Plasma glucose (>250mg/dL)
ABG (may show acidosis)
Capillary or serum ketones
Urinalysis (glucose and ketones)
U&amp;Es
LFTs
Blood urea nitrogen
Creatinine
Consider:
Chest x-ray (may show pneumonia)
ECG (may show MI or hypo/hyperkalaemia)
Cardiac biomarkers (elevated in MI)
Blood, urine or sputum cultures
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7
Q

Management plan

A

Acute

Specifics depends on level of volume depletion and sodium levels

First line to give intravenous fluids
Plus supportive care/ICU admission, potassium therapy, insulin therapy once potassium is at 3.3mEq/L, bicarbonate therapy, phosphate therapy

Ongoing

If DKA resolved and patient is able to tolerate oral intake then first line treatment is to establish a regular subcutaneous insulin regime

Treat comorbid precipitating event if present (MI, pneumonia etc)

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8
Q

Complications

A
Complications of treatment:
Hypoglycaemia
Hypokalaemia
Hypoxaemia
Pulmonary oedema (rare)
Cerebral oedema (rare but rapidly fatal, mainly in children)
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9
Q

Prognosis

A

With prompt treatment, more than 95% of patients recover
Mortality rate of around 2-5%, higher in older patients
Shock or coma on admission indicates worse prognosis
Children who develop cerebral oedema (57% recover completely, 21% mortality rate)

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