pediatric diabetic ketoacidosis (dka) - presentation diabetic ketoacidosis...6/15/2019 2 objectives...
TRANSCRIPT
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PEDIATRIC DIABETIC KETOACIDOSIS (DKA)
Alba E. Morales, MD
Associate Professor of Pediatrics
Barnstable Brown Diabetes Center/ UK Healthcare
June 15, 2019
Faculty Disclosure
• No relevant financial relationships to disclose.
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Objectives
Upon completion of this educational activity, you will be able to:
• Describe the diagnostic criteria of pediatric DKA
• Calculate the fluid and insulin requirements for a child with DKA
• Identify the risk factors for cerebral edema in pediatric DKA
Expected Outcome
• Participants will become familiar with the early assessment and management of pediatric DKA
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CASE
• 10 month old female
• Unremarkable past medical history
• Looked sick for 3 days, anorexia for 1 day
• To clinic for fast breathing
• Finger‐stick “Hi” in clinic
• 1 lb. weight loss as per clinic chart
• Sent to nearby emergency department
Labs‐ large ketonuria, hyperglycemia, acidosis, HbA1c= 9.8%
Symptoms and signs of diabetes in childhood
Neonates and infants
• Shock
• Weight loss
• Sepsis‐like picture
• Tachypnea, respiratory distress
Toddlers, older children
• New or worsening enuresis (parents expect UTI)
• Daytime “accidents”
• Weight loss, obesity + weight loss
• Acute abdomen, vomiting
• “by the book” presentation
• Yeast infection
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ED
• Drowsy
• Grunting respirations, RR= 60‐75, HR=120‐166
• Dry lips and tongue
• Clear lungs
• Tachycardia but no murmur
• Soft benign abdomen
• Cap refill?
Definition of DKA
• 1. Hyperglycemia > 200 mg/dl AND
• 2. Ketonemia (BOHB > 1 mmol/L) AND
• 3. Venous pH < 7.3 or HCO3 < 15 mEq/L
• Classification‐
• mild pH <7.3, bicarbonate < 1 5, anion gap >16
• moderate pH <7.2, bicarbonate <10, anion gap >16
• severe pH <7.1, bicarbonate <5, anion gap >16
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Source of Metabolic Acidosis in DKA
• Ketonemia (insulin deficiency)• Lactic acidosis (dehydration)
• Renal dysfunction (dehydration)‐ loss of bicarbonate in urine
Other causes of metabolic acidosis
• Sepsis/septic shock
• Hyperosmolar non‐ketotic diabetic coma
• Alcoholic ketoacidosis
• Uremia due to underlying kidney or liver disease
• Salicylate overdose
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Who is at risk of DKA?
New onset diabetes (Type 1 most commonly)
• Age < 4 years
• Children with NO 1st degree relative with diabetes
• Lower SE status
• Unusual triggers:• Steroids
• Atypical antipsychotics
• Diazoxide
• Immunosuppressive drugs
Established diabetes
• 1‐10% per patient/ year= risk of DKA
• Poor metabolic control
• Previous episodes of DKA
• Adolescent girls
• Youth with eating disorders/ other psychiatric illness
• Difficult family circumstances/ low SE status
Morbidity and Mortality of DKA in Children• Mortality has been constant at 0.15% (USA)
• Cerebral edema (CE) accounts for 57‐87% of all DKA deaths
• Depending on the study, CE incidence in patients with DKA varies from 1‐4% approximately and has been stable over last decade or so
• Mortality rates from CE in population studies have been reported as high as 25%
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Other causes of mortality and severe morbidity‐
• Hypokalemia
• Hyperkalemia
• Hypoglycemia
• Other CNS complications
• Hematoma, thrombosis, sepsis, infections, ARDS
• Late sequelae of cerebral edema (hypothalamic/ pituitary deficiencies)
Pathophysiology
• Complete or relative insulin deficiency gives rise to accelerated, unchecked ketogenesis and hyperglycemia (CATABOLIC STATE)
• Hyperglycemia causes progressive dehydration that can lead to renal dysfunction and severe loss of electrolytes (HYPOKALEMIA)
• Volume depletion and acidosis cause increased production of counter‐regulatory hormones which in turn worsen the above • Glucagon, catecholamines, GH, cortisol all contribute to increased gluconeogenesis and impaired peripheral glucose utilization leading to worsening hyperglycemia and hyperosmolality
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DKA is caused by insulin deficiency
SEVERE DEPLETION OF WATER AND ELECTROLYTES FROM THE INTRA ‐AND EXTRA‐CELLULAR FLUID COMPARTMENTS
Diabetic Ketoacidosis
• PREVENTION is best
• All families with diabetic children are educated on DKA prevention
• Provided with an educational magnet to keep handy
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DKA prevention magnet provided to all families
Where should DKA be managed?
• Unit should have• Experienced nursing staff trained in monitoring and management
• Written guidelines for DKA management in children
• Access to laboratories able to provide frequent and timely measurements of biochemical variables
• Specialist/ consultant pediatrician with training and expertise to guide management
• Severe DKA, those with mental status changes, compromised circulation, and children under age 4‐5 should be managed in an intensive care setting
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Disposition
• Admission• New onset diabetes
• Mild and moderate DKA to floor if no other risk factors for Cerebral edema
• Unable to manage DM, ketosis at home
• Discharge mild DKA with no risk factors home after consultation with specialist• Insulin pump malfunction‐must have access to long acting insulin, injections at home
• Good PO intake
• Well‐trained family
Disposition
New onset T1DM
• Will always need hospital admission
• PICU
• Floor
Established T1DM
• Mild DKA and improving, tolerating PO and well trained family‐may be discharged home
• Severe and Moderate DKA‐admission will be required• PICU
• Floor
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Disposition‐ consider intensive care transfer‐
o Presenting BUN > 30
o Patient received IV bicarbonate or insulin bolus
o Calculated mOsm > 350
[Calculated osmolality= 2xNa + (glucose/18) + (BUN/2.8)]
o Patient received > 40 mL/kg total initial volume replacement (include fluids
received prior to arrival to SCH)
o Corrected Na< 140 mEq/L or decreasing at 2 hour labs
[Corrected Na = Measured Na + (Serum glucose – 100)/100 X 1.6)]
ED
• 10 cc/kg NS bolus via IO line
• Transferred to PICU
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Assessment, new diabetes diagnosis, confirm DKA(Ideally within first 30 minutes)
Consider RISK factors HPI Signs Laboratory investigation
Prior DKA episodes Insulin omission (poor
adult supervision) Adolescent females Negative Social factors Recent illness,
infection Psychiatric disorder Eating disorder Surgery, trauma,
obesity Use of diabetogenic
meds
Polyuria Polydipsia New enuresis Nocturia Weight loss Abdominal pain Severe fatigue Nausea Weakness Headache Confusion Candida infection Drowsiness
Dehydration Kussmaul breathing Fruity smell of breath Emesis Abdominal tenderness
(diffuse) Mental status changes Lethargy
Blood glucose Blood gas Na, K, Cl, HCO3, Ca,
Mg, Phos BUN, Cr BOHB Blood culture if febrile
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ABCD and WEIGHT
• Airway (PALS)
• Breathing (PALS)‐ deep rhythmic fast (Kussmaul) , hypoxia
• Circulation‐ shock? Dehydration‐ cap refill time > 2 sec, etc.
• Disability/ Neurological evaluation• GCS at admission and at least every hour for at least 12 hours
• Headache history documentation
• Developmental delay, non‐verbal patients *
• Will need exact weight to calculate all fluids and insulin doses
Assess neurologic stability
• Glasgow coma scale in children > 5 years of age
• Verbal response criteria for children under 5 years
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GCS
Disposition‐ consider intensive care transfer‐
oAge ≤ 24 months
o Developmental delay or any condition that compromises communication
o GCS ≤ 13 after volume resuscitation
o Abnormal neurological exam after volume replacement
o Other organ system dysfunction
o Presenting pH ≤ 7.15
o Presenting HCO3 ≤ 5
o Presenting PCO2 < 10
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Goals of therapy
• Resolve acidosis as evident by anion gap < 15
• Prevent complications such as cerebral edema, hypoglycemia, hypokalemia, etc.
• Supportive therapy, including improvement in hydration status and management of electrolyte abnormalities
Reverse DKA
Rehydrate
• 1st HOUR: • resuscitation fluids (10‐20 ml/kg 0.9%NS bolus, repeat if needed up to 30 ml/kg total)
• Overt shock‐ 20 ml/kg 0.9% NS bolus
• Subsequent fluids need to be calculated to replace deficit and provide maintenance fluids using body weight as reference
Stop ketogenesis
• INSULIN• No bolus needed and may be associated with increased risk for cerebral edema
• 0.1 unit/ kg/hour regular insulin is default rate
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Rehydration
• 10 ml/kg 0.9%NS bolus over one hour, may repeat if needed up to 30 ml/kg total resuscitation fluids
• Subsequent fluids: (in tandem with insulin infusion)
• Assume 7% dehydration (replace deficit and calculate maintenance fluids over 24‐36 hours)
• Equal to 1.5‐2X maintenance rate
• 2 bag system (D10 bag and NS or ½ NS bag with additives)
Example
• 35 Kg child with BG= 380 mg/dl; serum K=4.8; Na= 138
• 350 ml NS bolus over 1 hour, then re‐assess need for another bolus
• AFTER NS bolus:• DO NOT give insulin bolus
• Start insulin 0.1 unit/kg/hr In tandem with rehydration fluids
• 1.5‐2 X maintenance for 35 kg child= 2700‐3600/ 24 hours = 112 – 150 ml/hr
• Replacement IV fluid order for this child: (remember to add potassium)
• 0.9%NS + 20 meq KCL and 20 meq/L Kphos at 112‐150 ml/hr
• Insulin‐ 3.5 units/hr
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Subsequent IV fluids order:
• 12 hours after first bolus or once serum chloride is ~ 110 meq/L (still using 2 bags)• Bag # 1‐‐‐‐D10 ½ NS + 20 meq KCL + 20 meq Kphos
• Bag #2‐‐‐‐½ NS+ 20 meq KCL + 20 meq Kphos
• BG > 300‐ use only fluids with no dextrose
• BG 200‐300 use both types of fluids (50‐50)
• Bg < 200 use only D10 containing fluids
• Decreasing NaCl content in IV fluids will help avoid hyperchloremic acidosis, a common complication of DKA therapy
Sodium trend
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Hyperglycemia vs acidosis
How much dextrose in IV fluids?
D10 + 40 meq K bag NS or ½ NS + 40 meq K bag
BG > 300 n0 100 % of rate
BG 200‐300 50% of rate 50% of rate
BG< 200 100 % of rate n0
If BG < 70 and still acidotic‐ consider use of D12.5 or increase rate of D10 bag, if acidosis resolved, should be able to eat and transition to SQ insulin
Hyperglycemia will always resolve faster than acidosis
UK PICU DKA Protocol
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Hypokalemia‐ common complication
Monitoring
• Continuous cardiorespiratory monitoring
• Bedside finger‐stick BG q 1 hour – alert MD if BG < 70 or > 400
• Neurochecks q 1 hour if ANY mental status alteration or risk factors for CE present
• BMP q 4 hours , measure serum BOHB (β‐hydroxybuterate) ‐ < 1 mmol/L indicates resolution of DKA• Bedside ketonemia monitoring available ( ideally using handheld meters that measure both glucose and ketones in capillary blood)
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Monitor I’s and O’s very closelyuse HR, perfusion as hydration indicators
DKA complications
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Take home messagesDO
• Have a high index of suspicion for diabetes in children of all ages (incidence of T1DM has been increasing in infants and toddlers)
• Know diagnostic criteria for DKA
• Timely rehydration will normalize intravascular volume/ peripheral perfusion and will help normalize counter‐regulatory hormone levels
• Insulin will shut down ketogenesisand will reverse catabolic state
AVOID
• Use of Bicarbonate
• > 40 ml/kg as bolus
• Lowering insulin infusion rate due to dropping BG levels if acidosis still present
• Using imaging studies to “confirm” suspected cerebral edema
Boston, MA, Chicago, IL, Columbus, OH, Denver, CO, Houston, TX, New York, NY, Philadelphia, PA, Providence, RI, Sacramento, CA, Salt Lake City, UT, St. Louis, MO, Washington, DC, and Wilmington, DE.
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Therefore‐ new suggested fluid guidelines
Key points in regards to cerebral edema
• Regard cerebral edema as a complication of DKA that can happen at any time during presentation (BEFORE and during DKA therapy)
• Detailed and frequent monitoring for CNS changes is key for early intervention
• Markers of severity of DKA (AT PRESENTATION) are useful as markers for increased risk of cerebral edema: • Increased BUN
• Greater hypocapnia
• Severity of acidosis
• Younger age= delayed diagnosis and more severe DKA
• Use of bicarbonate for treatment of acidosis
• Attenuated rise in serum Na during treatment• Serum sodium should rise by approximately 1.6 mEq/L for every 100 mg/dL (5.5 mmol/L) decrease in glucose concentration
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Clinical Cerebral Edema assessmentDiagnostic Criteria * Major Criteria Minor Criteria
Abnormal motor or verbal response to pain
Altered mentation/ fluctuating level of consciousness
Emesis
Decorticate or decerebrate posture Sustained heart rate deceleration (more than 20/min) not attributable to improved intravascular volume or sleep
Headache (especially if new/ recurrent after therapy started or if worsening in nature)
Cranial nerve palsy (especially III, IV, and VI) may result in double vision
Age‐inappropriate incontinence Lethargy ; not easily arousable
Abnormal neurogenic respiratory pattern (grunting, central hyperventilation, apneusis, Cheyne‐Stokes)
Diastolic BP > 90 mm Hg
Age < 5 years
• 1 diagnostic, or 2 major, or 1 major and 2 minor criteria have a sensitivity of 92%, a specificity of 96% and a false positive rate of only 4% for the recognition of DKA CE early enough for effective intervention
• In children < 5; 1 major and 1 minor criteria could be sufficient
Emergent Treatment of Cerebral Edema
• Maintain patent airway, ventilation/oxygenation and stable hemodynamics
• Elevate HOB 30 degrees
• Mannitol 1 g/kg I V (cerebral edema); 3% NS (5ml/kg) can also be used if not responding to Mannitol
• STAT non contrast CT scan of the head, look for CE, thrombosis, hemorrhage
• STAT neurosurgery consult
UK PICU Protocol
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Bibliography
1. Waller SL, Delaney S, Strachan MWJ . Does an integrated care pathway enhance the management of d iabetic ketoacidosis? Diabetic Medicine.2007:24;359 ‐63.
2. I lag LL, Kronick S, Ernst RD, Grondin L. Alaniz C. Liu L. Herman WH . Impact of a critical pathway on
inpatient management of diabetic ketoacidosis. Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice. 2003:62;23‐32.
3. Bull SY, Douglas IS, Foster M , Albert RK. Mandatory protocol for treating adult patients with
diabetic ketoacidosis decreases intensive care unit and hospital lengths of stay: results of a nonrandomized trial. Critical Care Medicine. 2007:35;4 I‐46
4. Dunger DB, Sperling MA , Acerini CL, etal. European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology/ Lawson
Wilkins Pediatric Endocrine Society Consensus Statement on Diabetic Ketoacidosis i n Children and Adolescents. Pediatrics 2004; 113;e 133‐e 140.
5. Felner EI, White PC. Improving Management of Diabetic Ketoacidosis in Children. Pediatrics
2001:108; 735.
6. Wolfsdorf J, Glaser N, Sperling, M. Diabetic Ketoacidosis i n I nfants, Children, and Adolescents. Diabetes Care 2006;29; 1 150‐1 158.
7. Joseph Wolfsdorf, Maria E Craig, Denis Daneman, David Dunger, Julie Edge, WR Warren Lee,
Arlan Rosenbloom, Mark A Sperling, Ragnar Hanas. Published in Pediatric Diabetes 2009(Suppl 12);10:118‐133. (International Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Diabetes Clinical Practice Consensus Guidelines chapter 10).
8. Modified with permission from: Muir AB, Quisling RG, Yang MC, Rosenbloom AL. Cerebral
edema in childhood diabetic ketoacidosis: natural history, radiographic findings, and early identification. Diabetes Care 2004; 27:1541. Copyright ©2004 The American Diabetes Association.
• 9. Glaser N, Kuppermann N. Fluid treatment for children with diabetic ketoacidosis: How do the results of the pediatric emergency care applied research network Fluid Therapies Under Investigation in Diabetic Ketoacidosis (FLUID) Trial change our perspective? Pediatr Diabetes. 2019;20:10–14. https://doi.org/10.1111/pedi.12795
• PECARN DKA FLUID Study Group. Clinical Trial of Fluid Infusion Rates for Pediatric Diabetic Ketoacidosis. N Engl J Med. 2018 June 14; 378(24): 2275–2287. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1716816
• Wolfsdorf JI, Glaser N, Agus M, et al.ISPAD Clinical Practice Consensus Guidelines 2018: Diabeticketoacidosis and the hyperglycemic hyperosmolar state.Pediatr Diabetes. 2018;19(Suppl. 27):155–177. https://doi.org/10.1111/pedi.12701
Thank you!
• Questions
• Contact info
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Re‐examining theories about CE cause
• Elevated urea nitrogen levels (suggesting greater dehydration) and hypocapnia, both with the potential to decrease cerebral perfusion, have been associated with risk of brain injury in several well‐controlled studies
• Elevated levels of inflammatory mediators during DKA have been documented in both human and animal studies, and findings in studies by same group document patterns of inflammation consistent with those observed in ischemia/ reperfusion injury
• Cerebral injury may be more common than previously thought; clinically apparent cerebral injury may depend on severity of DKA at presentation
• Rate and composition of IV fluids may not be relevant to risk of cerebral injury
Poor outcome factors‐• Risk factors for death or survival in a vegetative state were identified in a retrospective multicenter study of 61 children
• Elevated blood urea nitrogen at the time of initial presentation
• Intubation with aggressive hyperventilation (targeting a partial pressure of carbon dioxide [pCO ] of less than 22 mmHg)
• Severe neurologic compromise at diagnosis of cerebral injury (all patients who either died or survived in a persistent vegetative state had Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] scores ≤7 when cerebral injury was diagnosed)
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New since 2018‐The PECARN FLUID Trial found no significant differencesbetween study arms in either mental status changes (assessed by GCSand digit span scores) during DKA treatment, clinical diagnoses ofbrain injury, or cognitive testing scores at follow‐up
In plain terms:
• Fast administration rate of fluids= 2X maintenance for initial 12 hours, then 1.5 maintenance over next 24 hours (given after 20 cc/kg/NS bolus)• NS vs ½ NS to replace deficit
• Slow administration of fluids= 1.5 maintenance for 48 hours duration of IV fluids (given after a 10 cc/kg bolus)• NS vs ½ NS to replace deficit
• No difference in GCS outcomes; brain injury; or short term memory after DKA episode
• Children with severe DKA who were rehydrated at a faster rate improved their short term memory sooner than those who were rehydrated at the slower rate (not significant).
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Fluids‐modern take
• In summary, the PECARN FLUID Trial provided the first high‐quality data investigating the effects of fluid infusion rates and NaCl content on neurological outcomes of DKA in children. The FLUID Trial data suggest that a range of fluid infusion protocols can be used safely in children with DKA and intravenous fluids should not be restricted unnecessarily due to concerns about causing brain injuries. Children with DKA should receive fluid resuscitation similar to children with other conditions involving similar degrees of dehydration.