Pediatric DKA (Tucker) - MT Flashcards

1
Q

A 7 year old male who weighs 50 pounds presents to the ED with 2 day history of abdominal pain, no fever, had URI 2 weeks ago. Patient has been drinking well and has been waking at night to void. On physical exam, cap refill is delayed and there is a significant weight change from an appointment 2 weeks ago. Random glucose is 600 mg/dL and Urinalysis reveals elevated glucose and ketones in urine.

What is the Dx?

What is the initial treatment you would give? (3 things)

A
  • Dx: Diabetic Ketoacidosis
  • Place IV and give:
    1. 20ml/kg of 0.9NS bolus admin (stabilize CV status)
    2. Administer 0.1 units of Insulin per hour
    3. Give potassium infusion
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2
Q

Following initial treatment treatment of DKA with bolus fluid, insulin, and potassium, what molecule should you be concerned about replenishing in the patient?

When this molecule drops below _____ , you should start infusion to keep the patient stable.

A
  • blood glucose levels
  • 200 mg/dL
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3
Q

What lab tests should you obtain immediately after initial treatment of a pediatric patient with DKA? (x3)

A
  • BMP (Na, K, Cl, BUN, Cr, Gluc)
  • CBC
  • HbA1C
  • Blood gas (VBG more gentle than ABG)
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4
Q

Maintenance fluids by weight:

  1. Per 24 hours?
  2. Per 1 hour?
A
  1. first 10 kg = kg x 100 ml/kg/day, next 10 kg = kg x 50 ml/kg/day, kg above 20 kg = kg x 20 ml/kg/day
  2. Hourly rate = 4 / 2 / 1 ml/kg/hour (same pattern)
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5
Q

You should stop IV insulin and fluids when:

  1. Anion gap is less than _______
  2. Venous pH is greater than ______ or HCO3 is greater than ______
  3. When glucose is less than _______
  4. when patient can tolerate _________
A
  1. 12
  2. 7.3, 15
  3. 200
  4. oral intake
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6
Q

Failure of Na+ to improve after treatment may be an early sign of risk for what?

A

Cerebral edema

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7
Q

In DKA there is total body depletion.

When should you not administer Insulin in the treatment of a DKA patient?

Why?

A
  • If the patient is hyperkalemic, do no administer insulin until K+ is in normal range
  • Insulin drives K+ intracellularly (which causes problems)
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8
Q

On ECG:

  1. What will hypokalemia show?
  2. what will hyperkalemia show?
A
  1. hypokalemia = flat T waves, U waves, prolonged PR interval
  2. hyperkalemia will cause peaked T waves
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9
Q

pic

A

Rate: Ventricular rate 81

Rhythm: Normal Sinus Rhythm

Axis: Normal Axis

Final ECG Interpretation: U waves consistent with hypokalemia

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10
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