Hyper- and Hypoglycaemia Flashcards
What happens to insulin, adrenaline, cortisol and glucagon in hypoglycaemia, in order?
1) Low insulin
2) Release of glucagon
3) Release of adrenaline
4) Release of cortisol
What defines hypoglycaemia?
The exact blood level ranges, depending on the clinical context. It is a combination of blood level, symptoms and whether it is relieved with glucose therapy
How do you treat hypoglycaemia?
Alert: oral carbohydrates
- Fast: juice/syrup
- Slow: sandwiches
Drowsy: buccal carbohydrate
- Sub-lingual glucose gel
Unconscious: IV glucose
- Fast: 50ml of 50% glucose
- Slow: 100ml of 20% glucose
Consider IM 1mg glucagon if needed
What bloods are helpful in investigating hypoglycaemia? When should these be done?
- Insulin
- C-peptide
- Drug screens
- Auto antibodies
- Cortisol
- Free fatty acids
- Ketones
- Lactate
These should be done DURING the hypoglycaemia
Describe the causes of hypoinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia in adults
- Fasting
- Exercise
- Endocrine deficiencies
- Liver failure
- Anorexia
Describe the causes of hypoinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia in neonates
You expect the ketones to be present
If present:
- Prematurity
- IUGR
- GDM
If absent:
- Metabolic disorders
- Fatty acid oxidation deficiency
- Glycogen storage disorder 1
- Medium chain acetyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency
Describe the causes of hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia in adults
Check C-peptide
If low: exogenous insulin (too high a dose)
If high: endogenous insulin
- Insulinoma
- Sulphonylurea overdose
- Other diabetic drugs
What is a non-islet tumour hypoglycaemia?
Non-islet tumours secrete an insulin-like chemical that acts like insulin: big IGF-2
This will mean glucose, insulin, c-peptide, FFA and ketones will all be low