Title: Diabetic Ketoacidosis Management
1Diabetic Ketoacidosis Management
- Heidi Chamberlain Shea, MD
- Endocrine Associates of Dallas
2Goals of Discussion
- Pathophysiology of DKA
- Biochemical criteria for DKA
- Treatment of DKA
- Prevention of DKA
- Hyperosmolar Nonketoic Syndrome
3Epidemiology
- Annual incidence in U.S.
- 5-8 per 1000 diabetic subjects
- 2.8 of all diabetic admissions are due to DKA
- Overall mortality rate ranges from 2-10
- Higher is older patients
4DKAPrecipitating Factors
- Failure to take insulin
- Failure to increase insulin
- Illness/Infection
- Pneumonia
- MI
- Stroke
- Acute stress
- Trauma
- Emotional
- Medical Stress
- Counterregulatory hormones
- Oppose insulin
- Stimulate glucagon release
- Hypovolmemia
- Increases glucagon and catecholamines
- Decreased renal blood flow
- Decreases glucagon degradation by the kidney
5Diabetic Ketoacidosis
- Due to
- Severe insulin deficiency
- Excess counterregulatory hormones
- Glucagon
- Epinephrine
- Cortisol
- Growth hormone
6Role of Insulin
- Required for transport of glucose into
- Muscle
- Adipose
- Liver
- Inhibits lipolysis
- Absence of insulin
- Glucose accumulates in the blood
- Liver
- Uses amino acids for gluconeogenesis
- Converts fatty acids into ketone bodies
- Acetone, Acetoacetate, ß-hydroxybutyrate
- Increased counterregulatory hormones
7Counterregulatory Hormones - DKA
Increases insulin resistance Activates glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis Activates lipolysis Inhibits insulin secretion
Epinephrine X X X X
Glucagon X
Cortisol X X
Growth Hormone X X X
8Insulin Deficiency
Glucose uptake
Lipolysis
Proteolysis
Free Fatty Acids
Glycerol
Amino Acids
Gluconeogenesis Glycogenolysis
Hyperglycemia
Ketogenesis
Acidosis
Osmotic diuresis
Dehydration
9Signs and Symptoms of DKA
- Polyuria, polydipsia
- Enuresis
- Dehydration
- Tachycardia
- Orthostasis
- Abdominal pain
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Fruity breath
- Acetone
- Kussmaul breathing
- Mental status changes
- Combative
- Drunk
- Coma
10Lab Findings
- Hyperglycemia
- Anion gap acidosis
- (Na K) (Cl Bicarb) gt12
- Bicarbonate lt15 mEq/L
- pH lt 7.3
- Urine ketones and serum ketones
- Hyperosmolarity
11Differential Diagnosis Anion Gap Acidosis
- Alcoholic ketoacidosis
- Lactic acidosis
- Renal failure
- Ethylene glycol or methyl alcohol poisoning
- Starvation in late pregnancy or lactation (rare)
12Atypical Presentations
- DKA can be present with BS lt300
- Impaired gluconeogenesis
- Liver disease
- Acute alcohol ingestion
- Prolonged fasting
- Insulin-independent glucose is high (pregnancy)
- Chronic poor control but taking insulin
- Bedside urine ketones false negatives
- Measure acetoacetate not ß-hydroxybutyrate
- Send blood to lab
13Treatment of DKA
- Initial hospital management
- Replace fluid and electrolytes
- IV Insulin therapy
- Glucose administration
- Watch for complications
- Disconnect insulin pump
- Once resolved
- Convert to home insulin regimen
- Prevent recurrence
14Treatment of DKAFluids and Electrolytes
- Fluid replacement
- Restores perfusion of the tissues
- Lowers counterregulatory hormones
- Average fluid deficit 3-5 liters
- Initial resuscitation
- 1-2 liters of normal saline over the first 2
hours - Slower rates of 500cc/hr x 4 hrs or 250 cc/hr x 4
hours - When fluid overload is a concern
- If hypernatremia develops ½ NS can be used
15Treatment of DKAFluids and Electrolytes
- Hyperkalemia initially present
- Resolves quickly with insulin drip
- Once urine output is present and Klt5.0, add 20-40
meq KCL per liter. - Normo/Hypokalemia
- Malnourished individuals (alcoholics)
- Start K replacement and have K gt 3.0 prior to
start of insulin - Remember to check Magnesium
- Phosphate deficit
- May want to use Kphos
- Bicarbonate not given unless pH lt7 or bicarbonate
lt5 mmol/L
16Treatment of DKAInsulin Therapy
- IV bolus of 0.1-0.2 units/kg ( 10 units) regular
insulin - Follow with hourly regular insulin infusion
- Glucose levels
- Decrease 75-100 mg/dl hour
- Minimize rapid fluid shifts
- Continue IV insulin until urine is free of ketones
17Treatment of DKAGlucose Administration
- Supplemental glucose
- Hypoglycemia occurs
- Insulin has restored glucose uptake
- Suppressed glucagon
- Prevents rapid decline in plasma osmolality
- Rapid decrease in insulin could lead to cerebral
edema - Glucose decreases before ketone levels decrease
- Start glucose when plasma glucose lt300 mg/dl
18Insulin-Glucose Infusion for DKA
Blood glucose Insulin Infusion D5W Infusion
lt70 0.5 units/hr 150 cc/hr
70-100 1.0 125
101-150 2.0 100
151-200 3.0 100
201-250 4.0 75
251-300 6.0 50
301-350 8.0 0
351-400 10.0 0
401-450 12.0 0
451-500 15.0 0
gt500 20.0 0
19Complications of DKA
- Infection
- Precipitates DKA
- Fever
- Leukocytosis can be secondary to acidosis
- Shock
- If not improving with fluids r/o MI
- Vascular thrombosis
- Severe dehydration
- Cerebral vessels
- Occurs hours to days after DKA
- Pulmonary Edema
- Result of aggressive fluid resuscitation
- Cerebral Edema
- First 24 hours
- Mental status changes
- Tx Mannitol
- May require intubation with hyperventilation
20Once DKA ResolvedTreatment
- Most patients require 0.5-0.6 units/kg/day
- Pubertal or highly insulin resistant patients
- 0.8-1.0 units/kg/day
- Long acting insulin
- 1/2-2/3 daily requirement
- NPH, Levemir or Lantus
- Short acting insulin
- 1/3-1/2 given at meals
- Regular, Humalog, Novolog or Apidra
21Once DKA ResolvedTreatment
- Give SQ insulin at least 2 hours prior to
stopping insulin infusion. - Lantus or Levemir
- Steady state at 2-4 hrs
- Short acting analogs for meal times
- If transitioning to the pump
- Restart the pump and after 30 minutes stop
insulin infusion - May still be more insulin resistant so will need
more than usual dose - Check blood sugars in 2 hrs
- Offer supplemental
22I
23Insulin Types and Action
24Prevention of DKASick Day Rules
- Never omit insulin
- Cut long acting in half
- Prevent dehydration and hypoglycemia
- Monitor blood sugars frequently
- Monitor for ketosis
- Provide supplemental fast acting insulin
- Treat underlying triggers
- Maintain contact with medical team
25Preventing DKA
- Education
- Sick days
- Do not stop insulin but adjust
- Hyperglycemia
- If gt 300 mg/dl, then check urine ketones
- If ketones positive
- Increase fluids
- Take supplemental insulin Q2 hrs
- Insulin temperature sensitive
- lt 77 degrees
- Teenagers, homeless, pen and pump users
- Do not store insulin in the car
- Traveling and summer outdoor activities
- May need to replace more frequently
26Goals of Discussion
- Pathophysiology of DKA
- Biochemical criteria for DKA
- Treatment of DKA
- Prevention of DKA
- Hyperosmolar Nonketoic Syndrome
27Hyperosmolar Nonketotic Syndrome
- Extreme hyperglycemia and dehydration
- Unable to excrete glucose as quickly as it enters
the extracellular space - Maximum hepatic glucose output results in a
plateau of plasma glucose no higher than 300-500
mg/dl - When sum of glucose excretion plus metabolism is
less than the rate which glucose enters
extracellular space.
28Hyperosmolar Nonketotic Syndrome
- Extreme hyperglycemia and hyperosmolarity
- High mortality (12-46)
- At risk
- Older patients with intercurrent illness
- Impaired ability to ingest fluids
- Urine volume falls
- Decreased glucose excretion
- Elevated glucose causes CNS dysfunction and fluid
intake impaired - No ketones
- Some insulin may be present
- Extreme hyperglycemia inhibits lipolysis
29Hyperosmolar Nonketotic Syndrome Presentation
- Extreme dehydration
- Supine or orthostatic hypotension
- Confusion coma
- Neurological findings
- Seizures
- Transient hemiparesis
- Hyperreflexia
- Generalized areflexia
30Hyperosmolar Nonketotic Syndrome Presentation
- Glucose gt600 mg/dl
- Sodium
- Normal, elevated or low
- Potassium
- Normal or elevated
- Bicarbonate gt15 mEq/L
- Osmolality gt320 mOsm/L
31Hyperosmolar Nonketotic Syndrome Treatment
- Fluid repletion
- NS 2-3 liters rapidly
- Total deficit 10 liters
- Replete ½ in first 6 hours
- Insulin
- Make sure perfusion is adequate
- Insulin drip 0.1U/kg/hr
- Treat underlying precipitating illness
32Clinical Errors
- Fluid shift and shock
- Giving insulin without sufficient fluids
- Using hypertonic glucose solutions
- Hyperkalemia
- Premature potassium administration before insulin
has begun to act - Hypokalemia
- Failure to administer potassium once levels
falling - Recurrent ketoacidosis
- Premature discontinuation of insulin and fluids
when ketones still present - Hypoglycemia
- Insufficient glucose administration
33Conclusion
- Successful management requires
- Judicious use of fluids
- Establish good perfusion
- Insulin drip
- Steady decline
- Complete resolution of ketosis
- Electrolyte replacement
- Frequent neurological evaluations
- High suspicion for complications
- Determine etiology to avoid recurrent episodes