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DKA diagnostic criteria

DKA diagnostic criteria

DKA diagnostic criteria

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DKA Diagnostic Criteria - The Acid Test

DKA Diagnostic Triad Venn Diagram

The diagnosis of DKA is based on the classic triad of hyperglycemia, ketosis, and metabolic acidosis. Severity is further stratified to guide management intensity.

SeverityArterial pHSerum Bicarb (mEq/L)Anion GapMental Status
Mild7.25-7.3015-18>10Alert
Moderate7.00-7.2410-14>12Alert/Drowsy
Severe<7.00<10>12Stupor/Coma
-   **D**iabetes (Hyperglycemia): Plasma glucose >**250** mg/dL
-   **K**etosis: Positive serum or urine ketones
-   **A**cidosis (Metabolic): Bicarbonate <**18** mEq/L or pH <**7.3**
  • Anion Gap calculation: $Anion~Gap = [Na^+] - ([Cl^-] + [HCO_3^-])$

⭐ Euglycemic DKA is a critical variant where glucose may be <250 mg/dL. Suspect it in patients on SGLT2 inhibitors, pregnant women, or those with low caloric intake.

DKA Severity Classification - Grading the Sour

  • Severity is determined by the degree of acidosis and the presence of altered mental status, not the glucose level.
  • Anion Gap: Calculated to assess the metabolic acidosis.
    • Formula: $Anion\ Gap = [Na^+] - ([Cl^-] + [HCO_3^-])$

Exam Favorite: The anion gap "closes" (normalizes) with successful treatment. A persistently elevated anion gap suggests ongoing ketone production, requiring continued insulin therapy, even if glucose levels have normalized.

Differential Diagnosis - Other Acid Trips

  • High Anion Gap Metabolic Acidosis (HAGMA)

    • 📌 MUDPILES Mnemonic: Methanol, Uremia, DKA, Propylene glycol, Iron/Isoniazid, Lactic acidosis, Ethylene glycol, Salicylates.
  • Key DKA Mimics

    • Alcoholic Ketoacidosis (AKA): History of alcohol binge & poor nutrition. Glucose typically <250 mg/dL. Ketones present, but often primarily beta-hydroxybutyrate (may not be detected by all urine tests).
    • Starvation Ketosis: Occurs after prolonged fasting. Glucose is low-to-normal and acidosis is mild (HCO₃⁻ usually >18 mEq/L).
  • Other Considerations

    • Lactic Acidosis: Check lactate levels, especially in patients with sepsis or tissue hypoperfusion (lactate >4 mmol/L).
    • Toxic Ingestions: Suspect with an osmolar gap.
      • Ethylene Glycol: AKI, calcium oxalate crystals in urine.
      • Methanol: Vision changes.

⭐ An osmolar gap >10 mOsm/kg strongly suggests toxic alcohol ingestion (methanol, ethylene glycol) as the cause of the anion gap acidosis.

  • The diagnosis of DKA rests on a core triad: hyperglycemia, ketosis, and metabolic acidosis.
  • Blood glucose is typically > 250 mg/dL, although euglycemic DKA can occur with SGLT2 inhibitors.
  • Metabolic acidosis is defined by an arterial pH < 7.3 and a serum bicarbonate < 18 mEq/L.
  • A key feature is an elevated anion gap (>12), primarily due to ketone accumulation.
  • Always confirm with positive serum or urine ketones.

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