Hypoglycemia Flashcards

1
Q

What is Whipple’s Triad

A

a) Blood glucose measured at <70mg/dl
(b) Clinical signs and symptoms of hypoglycemia (confusion, irritability, fatigue, anxiety, sweating, irregular heart rhythm, perioral paresthesia)
(c) Clinical signs and symptoms resolve with appropriate glucose elevation

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2
Q

Symptoms for hypoglycemia begin at plasma glucose levels in the range of ___ mg/dL and impairment of brain function at approximately ___ mg/dL.

A

60 mg/dL

50mg/dL

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3
Q

Spontaneous hypoglycemia in adults is of what two principal types?

A
  • fasting

- postprandial

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4
Q

Fasting hypoglycemia is often subacute or chronic and usually presents with _________ as its principal manifestation.

A

neuroglycopenia

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5
Q

What type of hypoglycemia is relatively acute and is often heralded by symptoms of neurogenic autonomic discharge (sweating, palpitations, anxiety, and tremulousness)
-May be seen in patient after gastrointestinal surgery

A

Postprandial hypoglycemia

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6
Q

Signs and symptoms of what issue?
Patients with this may have a wide array of symptoms and signs.
(2) The clinical manifestations are divided into two broad categories: neuroglycopenic and sympathomimetic.
(a) Neuroglycopenic
–1) As glucose is the main energy source for CNS function, most episodes of symptomatic hypoglycemia include neurologic dysfunction.
–2) With a decline in serum sugar, the brain quickly exhausts its reserve supply of carbohydrate fuel, resulting in CNS dysfunction.
–3) This manifests most commonly by alterations in consciousness, lethargy, confusion, combativeness, agitation, and unresponsiveness.
–4) Other neuroglycopenic manifestations include seizures and focal neurologic deficit
(b) Sympathomimetic
–1) A rapid fall in blood glucose levels or the hypothalamic sensing of
neuroglycopenia causes the release of the counter-regulatory hormones, primarily the catecholamines epinephrine and norepinephrine.
—-a) Typical symptoms include anxiety, nervousness, irritability, nausea, vomiting, palpitations, and tremor

A

hypoglycemia

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7
Q

Labs If considering auto-immune

A

Serum antibody testing such as:

GAD-65, anti-islet cell, and anti-insulin antibodies

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8
Q

Labs if considering surreptitious cause

A

C-peptide, serial glucose/insulin levels in supervised setting, serum
sulfonylurea levels

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9
Q

Differential Diagnosis for hypoglycemia

A
  • -Hyperinsulinism: Pancreatic B-cell tumor and accidental or surreptitious insulin orsulfonylurea administration.
  • -Extra-pancreatic tumors
    • Postprandial hypoglycemia: early hypoglycemia (alimentary)
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10
Q

Treatment for Hypoglycemia if able to tolerate PO

A

drink juices, sucrose water, or glucose solutions; eat candy or other foods; or chew on glucose tablets when symptoms occur.

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11
Q

Immediate treatment of hypoglycemia involves provision of _____

A

Glucose

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12
Q

Do not attempt PO interventions on a patient with altered mental status why?

A

high aspiration risk

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13
Q

Treatment for hypoglycemia

Adults unable to eat or drink can be given what?

A
-glucagon 0.5 or 1 mg SC/IM
or
-50% dextrose 50 to 100 mL IV bolus
with or without
a continuous infusion of 5 to 10% dextrose solution sufficient to resolve symptoms
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14
Q

After initial treatment Once patients are alert and safe to do so, they should do what?

A

consume a meal (containing

carbohydrates, proteins, and fats) to prevent immediate hypoglycemia recurrence.

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15
Q

DISPOSITION HYPOGLYCEMIA
Either continued or recurrent mental status alteration, recurrent hypoglycemia, or a downward trend in serial glucose values during observation despite adequate replacement therapy demands….

A

admission to the hospital MEDEVAC

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16
Q

What is the disposition of this patient HYPOGLYCEMIA
A responsible adult who will monitor the patient’s mental status frequently, coupled with a motivated patient who will perform serum glucose determinations frequently and who can maintain oral feeding.

A

outpatient observation

17
Q

True/False

Strongly advise early involvement of a medical officer when cause for hypoglycemia is not clearly evident.

A

True

18
Q

Complications of hypoglycemia

A

(1) Coma
(2) Brain damage
(3) Traumatic injuries (MVA, falls, etc.)
(4) Death

19
Q

What are the clinical signs of hypoglycemia

A

confusion, irritability, fatigue, anxiety, sweating, irregular heart rhythm, perioral paresthesia