Diagnosis & Labs - The Hybrid Monster
- A metabolic storm combining severe hyperglycemia, ketoacidosis, and hyperosmolality.
- Core Lab Criteria:
- Plasma Glucose: >600 mg/dL (often higher)
- Arterial pH: <7.3
- Serum Bicarbonate: <18 mEq/L
- Serum Ketones: Positive
- Effective Serum Osmolality: >320 mOsm/kg H₂O
- Calculate osmolality: $2 imes ext{Na} + ext{Glucose}/18$
⭐ The degree of acidosis may be less severe than in pure DKA, but the combination with extreme hyperosmolality signifies a graver prognosis.

IV Fluids & Potassium - Leaky Pipes & Live Wires
-
Initial Fluid Resuscitation:
- Start with 1-1.5 L of 0.9% Normal Saline (NS) over the first hour to restore intravascular volume.
- If corrected serum Na⁺ is high or normal, switch to 0.45% NS.
- When plasma glucose approaches 200-250 mg/dL, add dextrose to the IV fluid (e.g., D5-0.45% NS) to prevent iatrogenic hypoglycemia.
-
Potassium Management:
- ⚠️ Crucial: Check serum K⁺ before starting insulin.
⭐ Despite a normal or even high initial serum K⁺, patients have a significant total-body potassium deficit. Acidosis forces K⁺ out of cells, artificially inflating the serum measurement.
Insulin & Glucose Control - The Sugar Tamer
- IV Regular Insulin Infusion:
- Start drip at 0.1 units/kg/hr.
- Goal: ↓ Glucose by 50-75 mg/dL/hr.
- Glucose Management:
- When blood glucose reaches ~200 mg/dL (DKA) or ~300 mg/dL (HHS):
- Do NOT stop insulin.
- Add dextrose to IV fluids (e.g., D5 ½ NS).
- Reduce insulin infusion rate to 0.02-0.05 units/kg/hr.
- When blood glucose reaches ~200 mg/dL (DKA) or ~300 mg/dL (HHS):
⭐ Transition Protocol: Administer long-acting subcutaneous insulin 1-2 hours before stopping the IV insulin infusion to prevent rebound hyperglycemia and ketoacidosis.

Resolution & Transition - The Finish Line
-
Resolution Criteria:
- Anion gap closed (< 12 mEq/L)
- Glucose < 200 mg/dL
- Bicarbonate ≥ 15 mEq/L
- Patient is alert and can eat.
-
Transition to Subcutaneous (SQ) Insulin:
- Administer basal (long-acting) insulin 1-2 hours before stopping the IV infusion.
- Calculate total daily dose (0.5-0.8 U/kg/day); split 50% basal, 50% prandial (divided with meals).
⭐ Critical Step: Overlap SQ basal insulin with the IV insulin drip for 1-2 hours. Stopping the drip prematurely causes rebound hyperglycemia due to the short half-life of IV insulin.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Mixed DKA/HHS features glucose >600 mg/dL alongside significant ketosis and acidosis.
- Aggressive fluid resuscitation with isotonic saline is the most critical initial step.
- Start IV insulin only after initial fluids and confirming potassium is >3.3 mEq/L.
- Bicarbonate therapy is rarely indicated, reserved only for severe acidosis with pH <6.9.
- The primary therapeutic goal is closing the anion gap, not simply normalizing blood glucose.
- Continuously monitor the anion gap, potassium, and serum osmolality.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app