DKA Flashcards
mechanism
in normal states the body uses carbohydrates for energy
in starvation the liver switches from carbohydrate metabolism and fatty acid synthesis to fatty acid oxidation and ketone body production
in the case of DKA, the lack of insulin means that even when blood glucose is high, the cells cannot uptake glucose (GLUT4 not expressed)
therefore switches to ketoacidosis as the method of energy production
typical presentation
gradual drowsiness
D&V in type 1 DM (very rare in type 2)
BM test
anyone with: unexplained vomiting abdo pain polyuria polydipsia lethargy anorexia ketotic breath (acetone being breathed off) dehydration coma deep breathing
triggers
infection MI pancreatitis chemo antipsychotics wrong insulin dose/non compliance
diagnosis
all 3 of:
acidaemia - blood pH <7.3 and/or bicarb <15mmol/L
hyperglycaemia - BM >11mmol/L
ketoanaemia - cap ketones >3mmol/L or ketonuria ++ or above
severe DKA
if one or more present at admission blood ketones >6mmol/L venous bicarb <5mmol/L pH<7.1 K <3.5mmol/L O2 stas <92% on air systolic BP <90mmHg pulse <100 or >60 anion gap above 16
anion gap
(K+ + Na+) - (Cl- + bicarb)
normal 8-18mEq/L
pitfalls in DKA
WCC may be seen in the absence of infection
infections often have no fever - MSU, cultures and CXR. start broad spec ABx if infection suspected
hyponatraemia is common due to osmolar compensation for hyperglycaemia. normal or increased [Na+] indicates severe water loss
ketonuria does not = ketoacidosis - ++may be present after an overnight fast
acidosis but without grossly elevated blood glucose may occur. also consider overdose (eg aspirin) and lactic acidosis
recurrent DKA
blood glucose will return to normal long before the levels of ketones in the blood
therefore reducing the insulin dose too soon could lead to a lack of clearance and a return to DKA
management DKA
ABC, 2 large bore cannulae
if SBP<90mmHg 500ml saline bolus (2nd bolus and ICU advice if no response)
tests: bloods, urine, ECG, CXR, ABG/VBG
insulin:
50units actrapid added to 50ml saline continuously at 0.1u/kg/h
check VBG for pH, bicarb, glucose and K+ at 1hr, 2hr then 2hrly after that
to avoid hypoglycaemia: when BM <14mmol/L start 10% glucose at 125ml /h alongside saline
continue fixed rate insulin until ketones <0.3mmol/L, venous pH >7.3 and venous bicarb >18mmol/L
urinary ketones do not indicate resolution
alcohol
inhibits gluconeogenesis in the liver so in diabetics can lead to a reduced blood sugar
also increases insulin sensitivity, so people taking insulin need to be careful of hypo’s