Course Content
Zambian Paediatric & Obstetrics-Gynecology (OB/GYN) Clinical Mastery

Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA)

Description

  • Life-threatening acute metabolic complication of diabetes.

  • Develops due to absolute or relative insulin deficiency.

  • More common in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM) than Type 2 (T2DM).

  • May be the first presentation of diabetes.

  • Requires high-level care (ICU/HDU).

Triggers / Precipitating Factors

  • Non-compliance with treatment (missed doses, underdosing).

  • Infections, commonly pneumonia and urinary tract infections.

  • Pancreatitis.

  • Cardiovascular events (acute myocardial infarction, stroke).

  • Stress: surgery, trauma, burns.

  • Psychological or emotional trauma.

  • Drugs: corticosteroids, thiazides, sympathomimetics, pentamidine.

  • SGLT-2 inhibitors may cause euglycaemic DKA.

Signs and Symptoms

  • Polyuria and polydipsia (dehydration).

  • Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain.

  • Fruity/acetone breath.

  • Kussmaul respiration (deep, rapid breathing).

  • Altered mental status: confusion, lethargy, or coma.

Investigations

Diagnostic Criteria

  • Plasma glucose ≥13.9 mmol/L.

  • Urine ketones ≥2+.

  • Arterial blood gas: high anion gap metabolic acidosis (pH <7.3, bicarbonate <15 mmol/L, anion gap >12 mmol/L).

  • Blood ketones: β-hydroxybutyrate ≥3 mmol/L.

Additional Blood Tests

  • Electrolytes: Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻, ionised calcium, phosphorus, magnesium.

  • Full blood count with differential.

  • Renal function: urea, creatinine.

  • Arterial blood gases.

  • ECG and CXR as indicated.

Treatment

General

  • Follow ABCDE approach.

  • Treat shock if present.

Fluid Replacement

  • Estimate 6–8 L fluid deficit over 24 hours.

  • Normal saline (NS) preferred; Ringers Lactate (RL) acceptable.

  • Initial regimen: 1 L NS over 1 hour, 1 L over 2 hours, 1 L over 4 hours.

  • Reassess before continuing fluids.

  • Target urine output ≥0.5 mL/kg/hr.

  • Switch to 5–10% dextrose when glucose <13.9 mmol/L.

  • If glucose <4 mmol/L, give 20–25 g of 50% dextrose diluted 1:1 to 25%, repeat every 25 minutes until glucose ≥4–6 mmol/L.

  • Maintain blood glucose at 11.1–13.8 mmol/L during treatment.

  • Continue until urine ketones are negative and pH/bicarbonate normalize.

Insulin Administration

  • Soluble insulin 0.1 IU/kg/hr IV or subcutaneously (max 10 IU).

  • Begin only after adequate hydration and serum potassium >3.5 mmol/L.

  • Hold insulin if K⁺ <3.5 mmol/L and correct hypokalemia.

  • Target glucose drop: 3–4 mmol/L per hour. Rapid drops may cause cerebral edema.

  • Reduce insulin by half when glucose <13.9 mmol/L.

  • Hold insulin if glucose <4 mmol/L; give 50% dextrose every 25 min until glucose >6 mmol/L.

Potassium Replacement

  • 20 mmol KCl in 500 mL NS/RL after every 2 L fluid.

  • Monitor serum potassium every 1–2 hours.

  • Maintain K⁺ 3.5–5.5 mmol/L.

Other Measures

  • Nasogastric tube for persistent vomiting or altered mental status.

  • Low molecular weight heparin for thrombo-prophylaxis unless contraindicated.

  • ECG monitoring.

  • Treat precipitating causes.

Indicators of Resolution

  • Urine ketones negative (trace ketones indicate resolving DKA).

  • Blood pH ≥7.35 and bicarbonate ≥15 mmol/L.

  • Serum β-hydroxybutyrate <0.3 mmol/L.

Post-DKA Insulin Therapy

  • Commence basal-bolus insulin when patient can feed orally.

  • Continue IV insulin if vomiting or unable to feed.

  • Overlap IV insulin 30–60 min after starting subcutaneous insulin to prevent treatment interruption.

Complications

  • Thromboembolism (e.g., stroke).

  • Pulmonary edema.

  • Acute kidney injury.

  • Cerebral edema (especially in children).

Hyperosmolar Hyperglycaemic State (HHS)

Description

  • Medical emergency with high mortality, mostly in elderly T2DM.

  • Characterized by:

    • Severe dehydration (hypovolemia).

    • Extreme hyperglycemia (>30 mmol/L).

    • High serum osmolality (>320 mOsm/kg).

    • Minimal or no ketones.

    • No significant acidosis (pH >7.3, HCO₃⁻ >15 mmol/L).

Precipitating Factors

  • Similar to DKA: infection, stress, drugs, trauma, surgery.

Treatment

Fluid Replacement

  • Estimated fluid loss: ~12 L.

  • Replace 50% in first 12 hours, remainder over next 12 hours.

  • NS preferred.

  • Regimen: 1–1.5 L in first hour, 1 L over 2 hours, 1 L over 4 hours.

  • Monitor hydration via urine output (>0.5 mL/kg/hr).

  • Adjust further fluid based on electrolytes and clinical status.

Insulin Therapy

  • Begin only after hydration improves.

  • Soluble insulin 0.1 IU/kg/hr IV or subcutaneously.

Potassium Replacement

  • Follow same protocol as DKA.

Supportive Measures

  • Thrombo-prophylaxis with LMWH.

  • ECG monitoring.

  • Treat underlying precipitating factors.

 

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