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Management of Adult Diabetic Ketoacidosis Adapted from the WHO IMAI District Clinician Manual Vol. 1 Dr. Linda Hawker, June 2014
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Presentation of DKA Three Main Features : 1. Hyperglycaemia : blood sugar over 17 mmol/litre (more than 300 mg/dl)) 2. Ketones increased in urine and blood 3. Acidosis: Blood pH less than 7.3 due to Ketoacidosis and Lactic acidosis Slide 1
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Dehydration DKA causes significant fluid loss, usually 3 to 6 litres and causes lactic acidosis Expect to give many litres of fluid during treatment Rehydration is very important Slide 2
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Potassium Loss With acidosis comes potassium (K+) loss All patients will require potassium replacement Slide 3
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Who can have DKA? Can be child or adult, type 1 or type 2 diabetes (more common in Type 1). Common triggers: Infection (example: pneumonia, gastroenteritis, urinary tract infection) Stopped medications Long duration of disease Slide 4
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What does the patient look like? Usual presentations : Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain Fatigue, muscle cramps Increased voiding (polyuria), increased drinking (polydipsia) Lethargy, eventually coma Deterioration starting with infection Shortness of breath, deep breaths Shock (dehydration or sepsis) Ketotic (sweet smelling) breath Slide 5
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Important ! The dehydration, acidosis and electrolyte problems are more dangerous than the high blood sugar and must be treated first Slide 6
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Investigations Blood glucose, should be more than 14 mmol/l (252 mg/dl) Electrolytes, creatinine, bicarbonate ECG Urine dipstick for glucose and ketones Whole blood count, blood culture if fever Chest X ray if suspect pneumonia Slide 7
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Treatment Step 1: Give IV fluids, start promptly Step 2: Correct potassium problems Step 3: Give insulin Step 4: Treat precipitating cause (eg: infection) Slide 8
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Manage Fluids Step 1 Start IV - if in shock (SBP < 90) give 1 litre normal saline (NS) immediately, give as quickly as possible. Do not add K+ to this litre If no shock, IV NS at 5-10 ml / kg body weight per hour ( about 1 litre per hour in average adult) Replace fluid more cautiously if pregnant, heart failure, kidney failure, elderly Slide 9
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Manage potassium (K+) Step 2 K+ will fall quickly as you give IV fluids, can cause heart arrhythmias Monitor K+ levels or ECG hourly for 4 hours Give IV K+ slowly over an hour, never by bolus, can add to IV Normal saline Keep K+ at 4-5 mEq/litre If can’t do blood K+, monitor by ECG Slide 10
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Manage Potassium (K+) If lab can do blood potassium level, do not start replacing K+ until less than 3.3 and urine output is at least 50 ml per hour. If lab can’t do K+, use ECG to see if signs of low or high K+. If can’t do K+ or ECG, starting with the second hour of IV fluids, add 20mmol K+ to each litre of fluid and slow IV rate once the patient is producing urine. Slide 11
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ECG and low or high K+ Low K+ (hypokalemia) Level under 3.3: Small or absent T waves, large U wave, Add 40 mmol per litre of fluid and run at one litre per hour until EKG normal High K + (hyperkalemia) Level over 5.3: Tall, pointed T waves and widened QRS Don’t add K+ to IV, check again in 1 hour Slide 12
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ECG: normal and low K+ levels Slide 13
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ECG: high K+ levels Slide 14
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Manage Glucose Step 3 Start short-acting (soluble) insulin subcutaneous (SC),intramuscular (IM) or intravenous(IV) once you have begun fluid replacement, and if K+ is over 3.3 Children under 18 years are at increased risk of cerebral oedema and it is better to wait until fluids have been given for 1-2 hours before starting insulin Slide 15
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First Hour: fluids, K+, insulin Insulin : Add 100 units of regular (soluble) insulin to 100 ml of sodium chloride 0.9% (normal saline) to make a standard concentration of 1unit insulin/ml of IV solution Source of table: WHO IMAI District Clinician Manual Volume 1 pages 138, 139 Slide 16
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After first Hour: fluids, K+, insulin Note: K+ 5.3 Col. 1 Col. 2 Col. 3 Col. 4 Col. 5 Slide 17
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Monitoring DKA Check pulse, BP, hydration status and level of consciousness every hour and confirm that the fluids are being infused If possible, check blood glucose every hour until it is less than 14 mmol/l, then switch to dextrose in saline infusion (dextrose 5% +sodium chloride 0.45%) Check K+ level or ECG on arrival, then every hour x 4 hours, then after 4 hours Slide 18
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Monitoring DKA May stop IV therapy and hourly insulin when patient can eat and drink and there are no signs of acidosis (deep breathing), and if blood glucose is under 12 mmol/l ( 216 MG/DL) Then patients can receive maintenance insulin shots according to glucose levels and weight Assess for signs of infection and start antibiotics as soon as possible Slide 19
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Giving Insulin after IV If patient is drinking and eating: Resume home insulin if glucose controlled If new to insulin: 0.7 units lente x patent’s weight in kg = total daily dose (usually given at bedtime or split 50% at breakfast and 50% at bedtime)* Eg: 80 kg pt. x 0.7 = 56 units lente (28 U qAM + 28 U qHS) Don’t give insulin if blood glucose under 4 * Based on Interior Health SC Insulin PPO for adult pt. eating Slide 20
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Key Messages Start IV fluids early, patients are dehydrated Monitor K+ by blood or ECG, replace slowly by infusion, never bolus Monitor blood sugar, give short acting insulin SC or IV (IV infusion requires extremely close monitoring) Treat infection promptly Slide 21
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Core Reference Sources Available on WHO Publications Web site WHO Integrated Management of Adolescent and Adult Illness (IMAI) District Clinician Manual : Hospital Care for Adolescents and Adults Volume 1 Quick Check in Emergency/OPD: pages 18 – 25 of IMAI Manual – a very useful method of triaging ill patients in OPD. Available as wall poster too. Slide 22
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Questions? Zambezi floodplainSlide 23
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