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Emergency Care Part 1: Managing Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA)

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Title: Emergency Care Part 1: Managing Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA)


1
Emergency CarePart 1 Managing Diabetic
Ketoacidosis (DKA)
2
Slide no 2
Programme
1
Managing DKA
2
Treating and preventing hypoglycaemia
3
Surgery in children with diabetes
3
Diabetic Ketoacidosis
Slide no 3
  • Occurs when there is insufficient insulin action
  • Commonly seen at diagnosis
  • Is a life-threatening event
  • Child should be transferred as soon as possible
    to the best available site of care with diabetes
    experience Initiate care at diagnosis

4
Type 1 Diabetes
  • Increased urine
  • Dehydration
  • Thirst

5
DKA
Liver
  • Weight loss
  • Ketones
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Abdominal pain
  • Altered level of consciousness
  • Shock
  • Dehydration

Muscle
Fat
Ketones
Weight loss
6
Clinical features
Slide no 6
Pathophysiology (Whats wrong) Clinical features (What do you see)
Elevated blood glucose High lab blood glucose, glucose meter reading or urine glucose, polyuria, polydypsia
Dehydration Sunken eyes, dry mouth, decreased skin turgor, decreased perfusion (shock rare)
Altered electrolytes Irritability, change in level of consciousness 
Metabolic acidosis (ketosis) Acidotic breathing, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, altered level of consciousness
7
Managing DKA
Slide no 7
  • Refer to best available site of care whenever
    possible
  • Need
  • Appropriate nursing expertise (preferably a high
    level of care)
  • Laboratory support
  • Clinical expertise in management of DKA
  • Written guidelines should be available
  • Document and use the form

8
DKA monitoring form
9
DKA monitoring
  • DKA protocol available to the clinic

10
Principles of DKA management (1)
Slide no 10
  • Correction of shock
  • Correction of dehydration
  • Correction of hyperglycaemia
  • Correction of deficits in electrolytes
  • Correction of acidosis
  • Treatment of infection
  • Treatment of complications

11
Principles of DKA Management (2)
Slide no 11
  • Correction of shock or decreased peripheral
    circulation quick phase
  • Correction of dehydration - slow phase
  • Do not start insulin until the child has been
    adequately resuscitated, i.e. good perfusion and
    good circulation

12
Principles
Slide no 12
  • Correction of shock
  • Correction of dehydration
  • Correction of hyperglycaemia
  • Correction of deficits in electrolytes
  • Correction of acidosis
  • Treatment of infection
  • Treatment of complications

13
Assessment
Slide no 13
  • History and examination including
  • Severity of dehydration. If uncertain about this,
    assume 10 dehydration in significant DKA
  • Level of consciousness
  • Determine weight
  • Determine glucose and ketones
  • Laboratory tests blood glucose, urea and
    electrolytes, haemoglobin, white cell count,
    HbA1c

14
Resuscitation (1)
Slide no 14
  • Ensure appropriate life support (Airway,
    Breathing, Circulation, etc.)
  • Give oxygen to children with impaired circulation
    and/or shock
  • Set up a large IV cannula/intra-osseous access.
  • Give fluid (saline or Ringers Lactate) at 10ml/kg
    over 30 minutes if in shock, otherwise over 60
    min. Repeat boluses of 10 ml/kg until perfusion
    improves

15
Resuscitation (2)
Slide no 15
  • If no IV available, insert nasogastric tube or
    set up intraosseous or clysis infusion
  • Give fluid at 10 ml/kg/hour until perfusion
    improves, then 5 ml/kg/hour
  • Use normal saline, half-strength Darrows solution
    with dextrose, or oral rehydration solution  
  • Decrease rate if child has repeated vomiting
  • Transfer to appropriate level of care

16
Principles
Slide no 16
  • Correction of shock
  • Correction of dehydration
  • Correction of hyperglycaemia
  • Correction of deficits in electrolytes
  • Correction of acidosis
  • Treatment of infection
  • Treatment of complications

17
Rehydration (1)
Slide no 17
  • Rehydrate with normal saline
  • Provide maintenance and replace a 10 deficit
    over 48 hours
  • Do not add urine output to the replacement volume
  • Reassess clinical hydration regularly.
  • Once the blood glucose is lt15 mmol/l, add
    dextrose to the saline (add 100 ml 50 dextrose
    to every litre of saline, or use 5 dextrose
    saline)

18
Rehydration (2)
Slide no 18
  • If IV/intra-osseous access is not available
  • Rehydrate orally with oral rehydration solution
    (ORS)
  • Use nasogastric tube at a constant rate over 48
    hours
  • If a NG tube tube is not available, give ORS by
    oral sips at a rate of 1 ml/kg every 5 min if
    decreased peripheral circulation, otherwise every
    10 min.
  • Arrange transfer of the child to a facility with
    resources to establish intravenous access as soon
    as possible

19
Principles
Slide no 19
  1. Correction of shock
  2. Correction of dehydration
  3. Correction of hyperglycaemia
  4. Correction of deficits in electrolytes
  5. Correction of acidosis
  6. Treatment of infection
  7. Treatment of complications

20
Insulin therapy (1)
Slide no 20
  • Start insulin after your ABCs (treat shock, start
    fluids) - stability has improved
  • Insulin infusion of any short acting insulin at
    0.1U/kg/hour (0.05 U/kg/hr if younger than 5
    years)
  • Rate controlled with the best available
    technology (infusion pump)
  • Do not correct glucose too rapidly. Aim for
    decrease of 5 mmol/l per hour

21
Insulin therapy (2)
Slide no 21
  • Example
  • A 24 kg child will need 2.4 U/hour
  • Put 24 U short acting insulin into 100 ml saline
    and run at 10 ml/hour
  • Equivalent to 0.1 U/kg/hour
  • Younger children lower rate e.g. 0.05 U/kg/hour

22
Insulin therapy (3)
Slide no 22
  • If no suitable control of the rate of the insulin
    infusion is available
  • OR
  • No IV access use sub-cutaneous or intra-muscular
    insulin.
  • Give 0.1 U/kg of short-acting regular or analogue
    insulin subcutaneously or IM into the upper arm 
  • Arrange transfer of the child to a facility with
    resources to establish intravenous access as soon
    as possible

23
Principles
Slide no 23
  • Correction of shock
  • Correction of dehydration
  • Correction of hyperglycaemia
  • Correction of deficits in electrolytes
  • Correction of acidosis
  • Treatment of infection
  • Treatment of complications

24
Electrolyte deficits
Slide no 24
  • The most important is potassium
  • Every child in DKA needs potassium replacement
  • Other electrolytes can only be assessed with a
    laboratory test
  • Obtain a blood sample for determination of
    electrolytes at diagnosis of DKA

25
ECG and Potassium Levels
26
Potassium (1)
Slide no 26
  • Levels determined by laboratory test
  • If not available, can use ECG (T waves)
  • Start potassium replacement once serum value
    known or patient passes urine
  • If no lab value or urine output within 4 hours of
    starting insulin, start potassium replacement

27
Potassium (2)
Slide no 27
  • Add KCl to IV fluids at a concentration of 40
    mmol/l (20 ml of 15 KCl has 40 mmol/l of
    potassium)
  • If IV potassium not available, replace by giving
    the child fruit juice or bananas.
  • If rehydrating with oral rehydration solution
    (ORS), no added potassium is needed

28
Potassium (3)
Slide no 28
  • Monitor serum potassium 6-hourly, or as often as
    is possible
  • In sites where potassium cannot be measured,
    consider transfer of the child to a facility with
    resources to monitor potassium and electrolytes

29
Principles
Slide no 29
  • Correction of shock
  • Correction of dehydration
  • Correction of hyperglycaemia
  • Correction of deficits in electrolytes
  • Correction of acidosis
  • Treatment of infection
  • Treatment of complications

30
Acidosis
Slide no 30
  • Usually due to ketones
  • Poor circulation will make it worse
  • Correction not recommended unless the acidosis is
    very profound
  • If bicarbonate is considered necessary,
    cautiously give 1-2 mmol/kg over 60 minutes.
    Usually not needed

31
Principles
Slide no 31
  1. Correction of shock
  2. Correction of dehydration
  3. Correction of hyperglycaemia
  4. Correction of deficits in electrolytes
  5. Correction of acidosis
  6. Treatment of infection
  7. Treatment of complications

32
Infection
Slide no 32
  • Infection can precipitate the development of DKA
  • Often difficult to exclude infection in DKA, as
    the white cell count is often elevated because of
    stress
  • If infection is suspected, treat with
    broad-spectrum antibiotics

33
Principles
Slide no 33
  1. Correction of shock
  2. Correction of dehydration
  3. Correction of hyperglycaemia
  4. Correction of deficits in electrolytes
  5. Correction of acidosis
  6. Treatment of infection
  7. Treatment of complications

34
Complications
Slide no 34
  • Electrolyte abnormalities
  • Cerebral oedema
  • Rare but often fatal
  • Often unpredictable
  • Related to severity of acidosis, rate and amount
    of rehydration, severity of electrolyte
    disturbance, degree of glucose elevation and rate
    of decline of blood glucose
  • Causes raised intra-cranial pressure
  • Can lead to death

35
Cerebral Oedema (1)
Slide no 35
  • Presents with
  • Change in neurological state (restlessness,
    irritability, increased drowsiness or seizures)
  • Headache
  • Increased blood pressure and slowing heart rate
  • Decreasing respiratory effort
  • Focal neurological signs
  • Diabetes insipidus unexpected/increased
    urination

36
Cerebral Oedema (2)
Slide no 36
  • Check blood glucose
  • Reduce the rate of fluid administration by
    one-third.
  • Give hypertonic saline (3), 5 ml/kg over 30
    minutes - repeat if needed
  • Mannitol 0.5-1 g/kg IV over 20 minutes may be an
    alternative
  • Elevate the head of the bed
  • Nasal oxygen
  • Intubation may be necessary for a patient with
    impending respiratory failure

37
Monitoring
Slide no 37
  • Use forms
  • Record hourly heart rate, blood pressure,
    respiratory rate, level of consciousness,
    glucose.
  • Monitor urine ketones
  • Record fluid intake, insulin therapy and urine
    output
  • Repeat urea electrolytes every 4-6 hours
  • Once the blood glucose is less than 15 mmol/l,
    add dextrose to the saline
  • Transition to subcutaneous insulin

38
DKA In Summary
Slide no 38
  • Life threatening condition
  • Requires care at the best available facility
  • Morbidity and mortality reduced by early
    treatment
  • Adequate rehydration and treatment of shock
    crucial
  • Written guidelines should be available at all
    levels of the healthcare system

39
Questions
40
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