Definition & Pathophysiology - Sugar Storm Genesis
- DKA Triad:
- Hyperglycemia: BG > 200 mg/dL
- Ketonemia (β-OHB ≥ 3) / Ketonuria (≥2+)
- Acidosis: pH < 7.3 or $HCO_3^-$ < 15
- Pathogenesis:
- Core: Insulin deficiency (absolute/relative).
- ↑ Counter-regulatory hormones (glucagon, etc.) exacerbate.
- Key Outcomes:
- ↓ Glucose use, ↑ production → Hyperglycemia → Osmotic diuresis.
- ↑ Lipolysis → ↑ FFAs → ↑ Ketogenesis → Ketonemia, acidosis.
⭐ DKA is precipitated by absolute or relative insulin deficiency leading to hyperglycemia, ketogenesis, and metabolic acidosis. Counter-regulatory hormones (glucagon, cortisol, catecholamines, growth hormone) exacerbate this state.
Clinical Features & Diagnosis - Red Alert Signs
- Classic Triad: Polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia.
- GI Symptoms: Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain.
- Dehydration: ↓ Skin turgor, dry mucous membranes, sunken eyes, tachycardia.
- Respiratory: Kussmaul breathing (deep, rapid), fruity breath (acetone).
- Neurological: Altered sensorium (lethargy to coma) - ⚠️ Cerebral edema risk!
- Diagnostic Criteria (Lab):
- Hyperglycemia: Blood glucose > 200 mg/dL (> 11 mmol/L).
- Metabolic Acidosis: Venous pH < 7.3 OR Serum bicarbonate < 15 mmol/L.
- Ketosis: Ketonemia (β-hydroxybutyrate ≥ 3 mmol/L) OR significant ketonuria.
- Elevated Anion Gap: $AG = Na^+ - (Cl^- + HCO_3^-)$ > 12.
⭐ Kussmaul breathing (deep, rapid respirations) is a clinical sign of severe metabolic acidosis as the body attempts to compensate by blowing off CO2.
Management Principles - Rescue Protocol
- 📌 F-I-P-M for DKA: Fluids, Insulin, Potassium, Monitoring.
- Fluids (IV):
- Initial: NS (0.9% NaCl) 10-20 mL/kg bolus (1 hr). Repeat if shock.
- Deficit + Maintenance: Correct total fluid deficit over 48 hrs + maintenance.
- $Fluid\ Deficit\ (L) = % \text{ dehydration} \times \text{body weight (kg)}$
- Add Dextrose fluids (e.g., D5NS, D5 0.45% Saline) when BG < 250-300 mg/dL.
- Insulin:
⭐ Insulin therapy should only be initiated after starting fluid resuscitation and ensuring serum potassium is ≥ 3.3 mEq/L to prevent life-threatening hypokalemia.
- Start 1-2 hrs after initiating fluid therapy.
- Continuous IV infusion: 0.05-0.1 U/kg/hr. (NO insulin bolus).
- Potassium (K+):
- Anticipate ↓K+ with insulin.
- If K+ < 3.3 mEq/L: Hold insulin, give K+ (20-40 mEq/L in IV fluid).
- If K+ 3.3-5.5 mEq/L & urinating: Add K+ 20-40 mEq/L to IV fluids.
- If K+ > 5.5 mEq/L: Defer K+ until urine output confirmed; recheck.
- Monitoring:
- Hourly: BG, vitals, neurological status (for cerebral edema).
- 2-4 hourly: Electrolytes (esp. K+), VBG (for pH, HCO3-), ketones.

Complications & Monitoring - Watchtower Duty
- Cerebral Edema: Most feared. Signs: headache, ↓HR, altered sensorium. Mannitol 0.5-1 g/kg IV.
- Hypokalemia: During insulin therapy. Monitor K+ closely.
- Hypoglycemia: Due to insulin. Monitor CBG hourly.
- Hyperchloremic acidosis (from NS).
- Others: Thrombosis, ARDS.
- Monitoring:
- Hourly: Vitals, GCS, fluid I/O, CBG.
- 2-4 hourly: Electrolytes (K+, Na+), VBG.
- ECG & strict neuro watch.
⭐ Cerebral edema is the most dangerous complication of pediatric DKA, with early warning signs including headache, slowing heart rate, and altered mental status.
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High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- DKA triad: Hyperglycemia (>200 mg/dL), ketosis, & metabolic acidosis (pH <7.3, HCO3 <15).
- Fluids: Initial 0.9% NS (10-20 mL/kg); correct deficit over 48h to prevent cerebral edema.
- Insulin: 0.1 U/kg/hr IV after initial fluids; no IV bolus.
- Potassium: Add to IVF once K+ <5.5 mEq/L & urine output good; monitor.
- Cerebral edema: Most feared; treat with mannitol or 3% saline.
- Bicarbonate: Avoid unless pH <6.9 with severe cardiac dysfunction.
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