Hypoglycaemia Flashcards
Hypoglycaemia treatment
Depends on conscious state
- Alert - oral glucose first then complex carbs to maintain
- Drowsy - glucose gel
- Unconscious / no swallow - iv 100ml 20% glucose
(If difficult to manage or insulin-induced consider IM/SC glucagon 1mg)
Physiology of hypoglycaemia
Low glucose stimulates insulin + glucagon release
4 main actions - reduced glucose uptake, glycogen breakdown, lipid breakdown, gluconeogenesis
Raised glucose + B-oxidation of FFA (ketone production)
Algorithm hypoglycaemia
- Confirm hypoglycaemia (grey top lab glucose)
- Measure insulin levels
- Measure C-peptide
- If hypoinsulinaemic measure ketones
Raised C-peptide
Endogenous insulin (C-peptide is pro-insulin cleavage product)
Low C-peptide
Exogenous insulin (no cleavage)
Hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia
- High C-peptide: Endogenous insulin - insulinoma (MEN), sulphonylureas, islet cell hyperplasia, quinine, pentamidine
Low C-peptide: Exogenous insulin - Insulin overdose in diabetics
Low glucose Low insulin ('hypoinsulinaemic')
Adult - Fasting, strenuous exercise, endocrine deficiency, anorexia, liver failure, non-islet cell tumour (paraneoplastic IGF-2 production which stimulates
Neonates - raised ketones = premature, IUGR, co-morbodity; low ketones = metabolic disorder
How do non-islet cell tumours cause hypoinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia?
Paraneoplastic syndrome - IGF2 production
Binds insulin to ‘hide’ insulin whilst stimulating glucose absorption by binding IGF-1 receptors
Whipple’s triad of hypoglycaemia
Low glucose
Symptoms relieved by giving glucose
Adrenergic (palpitations, sweating, tremors) then neuroglycopaenic (confusion, seizures, coma) symptoms
Hypoglycaemia values
<4mmol/L adult
<2.5mmol/L children
(But depends on person)