HONK by Aijaz
HONK by Aijaz
HONK by Aijaz
A 68 yrs old male presented in emergency with progressive drowsiness for past 48 hrs. He is known diabetic for 10 yrs and taking metformin. Before deterioration he was suffering from high grade fever, burning micturition, polyuria and increased thirst for 3 weeks.
Examination
He is drowsy, dehydrated and have reduced skin turgor. o Pulse = 112/min (Feeble, Regular) o Temp = 102 F o BP = 100/60 mm Hg o RR = 22 / min o BSL = 650 mg / dl
Investigations
Hb = 8 gm /dl TLC = 18 x 103 / ul DLC = Neutrophils 80% Platelets = 2000 x 103 / ul ESR = 30 LFTs = Normal Urea = 65 mg/dl Creatinine = 1.9 ml/dl Na = 151 mmol/l K = 3 mmol/l Cl = 110 mmol/l CUE = Pus cells 10 ~ 12, Glucose +++, Proteins + Ketones = -ive
Pathophysiology
DM
Acute Illness Dehydration
Decreased insulin Increased Glucagon, catecholamine's, cortisol, Hyperglycemia, Hyperosmolarity Osmotic diuresis, Dehydration, Electrolyte Loss
Factors
Relative Insulin availability Decreased Lipolysis Relatively low Counter regulatory hormones
History
Known Case of type 2 DM 30 ~ 40 % HONK is initial presentation Duration of days to weeks Preceding Illness + increasing dehydration Decreased oral hydration (vomiting,dementia, immobility)
Vital signs
Tachycardia Hypotension Tachypnea Temperature (Increase or decrease)
(Hypothermia is a poor prognostic factor)
kin examination
Decrease turgor Sunken eyes, Dry mouth Cranial neuropathies Visual field losses
Diagnostic Considerations
The differential diagnosis includes any cause of altered mental status Central nervous system infection Hypoglycemia Hyponatremia Severe dehydration Uremia Hyperammonemia Drug overdose Sepsis
VBGs
Substituted in patients with normal oxygen saturation on room air. The pH measured by a VBG is 0.03 pH units less than the pH on an ABG.
Urinalysis
Elevated specific gravity Glucosuria Small ketonuria Evidence of urinary tract infection (UTI).
Radiography
A chest radiograph is useful to screen for pneumonia. Abdominal radiographs are indicated if the patient has abdominal pain or is vomiting.
CT of the Head
indicated in many patients with focal or global neurologic changes who show no clinical improvement after several hours of treatment, even in the absence of clinical signs of intracranial pathology.
Management
American Diabetes Association management guidelines: Fluids and Electrolytes Insulin Detection and Treatment of underlying cause
Airway management
Endotracheal intubation may be indicated.
Fluid resuscitation
Fluid deficits in hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS) are large May be 10 L or more Bolus of 500 mL isotonic saline o 1 Ltr in 30 mins o 1 Ltr in 1 Hr o 1 Ltr in 2 Hrs o 1 Ltr in 4Hrs o 1 Ltr in 6 Hrs Maintain UOP = 30 ~ 50 ml / hr
High initial volume may be necessary in patients with severe volume depletion.
Slower initial rates may be appropriate in patients with significant cardiac or renal disease. Do not correct hypernatremia too quickly, to avoid cerebral edema. Switch to half-normal saline once blood pressure and urine output are adequate. Once serum glucose drops to 250 mg/dL, the patient must receive dextrose in the IV fluid.
Insulin Therapy
Many patients respond to fluids alone facilitates correction of hyperglycemia
Dosage 0.1 ~ 0.4 units / Kg STAT 0.1 / Kg / Hr Maintain Blood glucose = 200 ~ 250 mg / dl *Insulin used without concomitant fluid replacement increases the risk of shock
Electrolyte Replacement
Potassium st Not given in 1 Ltr unless K < 3 mmol / ltr 40 mmol / ltr if K < 3.5 mmol / ltr 20 mmol / ltr if K = 3.5 ~ 5 mmol / ltr Do not add if K > 5 mmol / ltr Limits 20 mmol / Hr 40 mmol / Ltr 80 mmol / day
When Blood Glucose Falls to 200 ~ 250 mg / dl, swap infusion fluid to 5% dextrose (1 Ltr + 20 mmol KCl 6 hourly)
Insulin with dose adjusted according to hourly blood glucose test results
(1 Unit insulin for 8 ~ 10 g of CHO)
Once Patient stable and able to eat and drink, transfer patient to 4 time daily subcutaneous insulin regime
Additional measures
(According to cause)
Antibiotics (Broad spectrum) Antipyretics Antiemetics NG tube (if drowsy) CVP pressure monitoring (if shocked or cardiac, renal impairment) Subcutaneous prophylactic heparin
Diet
BSL Control
Complications
Acute circulatory collapse
Complications
Thromboembolism
Complications
Cerebral edema
HONK vs DKA
Thank you