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collective crises…

November 10, 2016 By Christopher Partyka Leave a Comment

the case.

a 28 year old female is brought into your resuscitation bay by paramedic crews following a two day history of nausea and vomiting. As she rolls past, you notice that she is distressed with pain, looks clinically very dry and is quite drowsy.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: #FOAM, Endocrine, Interesting, Surgery Tagged With: Addison's, adrenal crisis, adrenal insufficiency, hernia, hyperkalaemia, lactate, small bowel obstruction, steroids, umbilical hernia

biochemical bugaboo…

December 6, 2013 By Christopher Partyka Leave a Comment

the case.

a 62 year old female presents to ED with breathlessness & chest pain. [Read more…]

Filed Under: #FOAM, Endocrine, Interesting, Metabolic Tagged With: hypercalcaemia, hyperparathyroidism, hypophosphataemia, multiple myeloma, thiazide

a little low…

September 16, 2013 By Christopher Partyka Leave a Comment

the case.

A 48 year old female arrives to ED via ambulance following an intentional overdose. Her husband discovered her taking tablet after tablet in the bathroom at home. She has a history of depression & diabetes and reports feeling ‘a little low’…

As the paramedics finish handover, they hand you these…. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Endocrine, Toxicology Tagged With: antidote, hypoglycaemia, octreotide, sulfonylurea overdose, sulphonylurea, sulphonylurea overdose, toxicology

sweet & sour…

February 3, 2013 By Christopher Partyka Leave a Comment

The case.

A 7 year old boy presents to your ED with a 3-4 day history of fevers, nausea and vomiting. There is some associated non-specific abdominal pain. He has a history of Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus. His blood glucose at triage is reading ‘HI’ and his finger-prick ketones are 6.4 mmol/L. He is therefore taken through to your resus bay, where you achieve IV access and get the following set of results…

BloodGas

EUCs

 

How do you approach this child ?

Well, there are no hidden tricks with this case. This is not a fancy diagnosis, rather a very common one. I feel that if you are in a department that sees children, then you need to know Paediatric DKA back to front & be able to manage it with a certain level of finesse, particularly as there is certainly the potential to do more harm than good.

What are your principles of management?

Management of Paediatric DKA.

I wanted to use this case as a vignette to bring the following paper to your attention….

ISPADpaper

To my knowledge it is the most concise paper that summarises the management of Paediatric DKA. Below are what I consider the pertinent points to take from this guideline…

Diagnosis:

    • * Hyperglycaemia 
           - Blood glucose > 11mmol/L (200mg/dL)
      * Venous pH < 7.3 or HCO3 < 15mmol/L
      * Ketonaemia / Ketonuria.

Severity:

    • * Mild
           - pH < 7.3  or  HCO3 < 15 mmol/L
      * Moderate
           - pH < 7.2  or  HCO3 < 10 mmol/L
      * Severe  
           - pH < 7.1  or  HCO3 < 5 mmol/L

Goals of Therapy:

    • * Correct dehydration.
      * Correct acidosis & reverse ketosis.
      * Restore blood glucose to near normal.
      * Avoid complications of therapy.
      * Identify & treat any precipitating causes.

Fluid Management:

    • * Severe volume depletion w/out shock.
           - Volume resuscitation begins immediately w/ 0.9% saline.
           - Aim for 10mL/kg/hr over 1-2 hours
                ~ repeat if necessary.
           - Do not exceed 30mL/kg in first 4 hours.
      
      * DKA w/ shock (rare).
           - 20mL/kg bolus (0.9% Saline or Hartman's) 
           - reassess after each bolus
           - don't forget the intraosseous route !
      
      * Subsequent fluid management (deficit replacement).
           - 0.9% Saline or Hartman's for at least 4-6 hours.
                ~ Thereafter; tonicity > 0.45% (w/ added K+)
           - Calculate fluid deficit (ie. 5 vs 7 vs 10% dehydration).
                ~ Rehydrate evenly over 48 hours
                ~ Avoid rates of > 1.5-2x usual daily maintenance requirements.
                ~ click here for fluid calculation example
           - No need to add urinary losses to fluid calculations.
           - Sodium content may need to be increased 
             (if Na+ not increasing w/ appropriate therapy).

Insulin Therapy:

    • * Start insulin infusion 1-2 hours after commencing fluid replacement.
           - ie. after initial volume expansion.
      * Dose = 0.1 units / kg / hour (via infusion).
           - reduce to 0.05 units/kg/hr in those w/ exquisite insulin sensitivity.
           - do not use boluses !!
      * Continue insulin until DKA resolves [ Target BSL ~ 11mmol/L ].
           - ie. pH > 7.3, HCO3 > 15 mmol/ or anion gap is closed.
      * Add 5% Dextrose to IV fluid when glucose ~ 14-17mmol/L
           - consider adding earlier w/ rapid glucose drop (>5mmol/hr).
           - up to 10-12.5% may be required to correct acidosis.

Potassium Replacement:

    • * Children w/ DKA have total body deficits of up to 3-6 mmol/kg.
      * Replacement is required regardless of serum K+ concentration.
           - If hypokalaemic;
                ~ start K+ replacement w/ initial volume expansions.
                ~ concentration of 20mmol/L should be used.
           - If normal K+;
                ~ start K+ replacement after expansion, before insulin therapy.
           - If hyperkalaemic;
                ~ defer K+ replacement until urine output is documented.
      
      * Maintenance therapy;
           - Potassium concentration of 40mmol/L.
      * Maximum replacement is ~ 0.5mmol/kg/hr.
      

Phosphate Replacement:

    • * No clinical benefit from routine replacement.
      * Severe hypophosphataemia w/ unexplained weakness should be treated.
      * Potassium phosphate can be used with KCl to replace both.
           - Beware inducing hypocalcaemia.

Acidosis:

    • * Severe acidosis is reversible by fluid & insulin therapy.
           - Insulin stops further ketoacid production & generates bicarbonate.
      * No clinical benefit from bicarbonate administration.
           - May cause paradoxical CNS acidosis.
      * Consider bicarbonate use in;
           - severe acidosis (pH < 6.9) w/ decreased cardiac contractility 
             & vasodilatation 
           - life threatening hyperkalaemia.

Cerebral Oedema:

    • * Responsible for 60-90% of all DKA-related deaths.
      * Incidence ~ 0.5-0.9% of DKA cases.
      * Mortality ~ 21-24%.
      
      * Risk Factors:
           - younger age / New onset diabetes / longer duration of symptoms
           - greater hypocapnia (adjusted for severity of acidosis)
           - more severe acidosis
           - increased serum urea
           - bicarbonate therapy (to correct acidosis)
           - greater volumes of fluid given in first 4 hours
           - attenuated rise in serum sodium concentration (despite therapy)
           - administration of insulin in first hour of fluid therapy
      
      * Signs & Symptoms:
           - Headache / progressive bradycardia or hypertension
           - Altered neurological status
                ~ restlessness
                ~ irritability
                ~ drowsiness
                ~ incontinence 
           - Focal neurological signs (eg. cranial nerve palsies)
           - Decreased oxygen saturations.
      
      * Treatment:
           - Elevate head of bed
           - Reduce IV fluids to 1/3 the rate
           - Mannitol:
                ~ 0.5-1.0 grams/kg over 20 minutes.
                ~ repeat if no response in 30-120 minutes.
           - Hypertonic (3%) saline.
                ~ an alternative to mannitol
                ~ 5-10mL/kg over 30 minutes.
           - Intubation. Avoid aggressive hyperventilation.
           - CNS imaging (CT-Brain); 
                ~ confirming diagnosis/assessing for alternate diagnoses.

References

Reference.

  1. Wolfsdorf, J. et al. Diabetic ketoacidosis in children and adolescents with diabetes. Pediatric Diabetes. 2009. 10 Suppl 12: 118–133.

 

Filed Under: Acid-Base, Endocrine, Paediatrics Tagged With: diabetes, diabetic ketoacidosis, DKA, endocrinology, insulin, ketones, paediatrics, pediatrics

an obscure acidosis…

December 3, 2012 By Christopher Partyka Leave a Comment

The Case.

64 year old male attends your ED with a complaint for 3 months of progressive weakness, however over the past 7 days he has had multiples falls secondary to his ‘legs just completely giving way’.  You note on the hospital records that he has a history of alcoholism (150-250 grams per day). After a long & drawn out discussion (think, blood from a stone) in an attempt to elaborate his history, you gain the knowledge that …

  1. he has had some chronic worsening, low back pain
  2. he has not eaten a proper meal for over a week (and no alcohol in that time either)
  3. he has lost a ‘decent amount of weight’, but cannot objectify it any further.

He has no known past medical history & takes no regular medications.

He looks crook. Pale, diaphoretic and clammy. Tachycardic (@120/min) and hypertensive (165/110 mmHg). He is afebrile however. No murmurs, chest clear. Tender hepatomegaly. No midline back pain. Normal power, sensation and reflexes to both legs (with good peripheral pulses).

Here is his venous blood gas and accompanying chemistry….

VBG01

What are your thoughts ?
Differential diagnoses ??
What are you going to do next ???

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Acid-Base, Endocrine, Interesting, Metabolic Tagged With: blood gas, lactate, lactic acidosis, lymphoma, malignancy, thiamine

iatrogenic acceleration…

November 18, 2012 By Christopher Partyka Leave a Comment

The Case.

A 46 year old restrained passenger in a high-speed MVA rolls into the resus bay. She is intubated & sedated [easily ventilated & oxygenated, no evidence of chest trauma], persistently tachycardic @ 160/min with a systolic BP of 90mmHg & has a very postive FAST exam….

She spends less than 15 minutes in your ED (extra IV access, blood transfusion continued, limbs splinted) before heading for a trauma laparotomy. She has a liver laceration (repaired) and capsular haematoma, complete bladder rupture (repaired) and splenic haematoma (managed conservatively). Post-op she goes via radiology for a ‘pan-scan’….

Her post-operative ICU stay is a rocky one, marked by ongoing transfusion, coagulopathy and persistent tachycardia (still around 160 beats per minute). Some 6 hours later with her haemoglobin & INR stable, she remained tachycardic at 150-60 (still sinus) & has developed a temperature of 38.6*C.

What are your thoughts ??

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Endocrine, Interesting, Radiology Tagged With: contrast, contrast-medium, Iodine, radiology, Thyroid

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