007 - SBARand Hypo Algorithm June2012
007 - SBARand Hypo Algorithm June2012
007 - SBARand Hypo Algorithm June2012
BACKGROUND
Common causes of hypoglycaemia
•Inadequate food intake, fasting, delayed or missed meals
•Too much insulin or sulphonylurea
•Insulin administration/drug administration at an inappropriate time
•Problems with insulin injection technique/injection site causing variable insulin absorption
•Increased physical activity
•Alcohol
At risk groups
•Strict glycaemic control, impaired hypoglycaemic awareness, cognitive impairment, extremes of age, breast feeding mother with diabetes
Conditions that increase risk of hypoglycaemia
•Malabsorption, gastroparesis
•Abrupt discontinuation of corticosteroids, hypoadrenalism, renal or hepatic impairment, pancreatectomy
ASSESSMENT
Assess recent pattern of blood glucose levels i.e. last 48 hours.
•Establish when and what the patient last ate
•Check insulin/ diabetes medication is being prescribed and administered at correct dose, time, and in relation to food intake
•Check for signs of lipohypertrophy (lumpy areas at injection sites) which may affect insulin absorption
•Check credibility of blood glucose monitoring e.g. handwashing before testing
RECOMMENDATION
Treat hypoglycaemia as per protocol. Observe patient until recovery complete and provide information on hypoglycaemia management . Consult
diabetes team for advice if necessary.
•Establish the cause of hypoglycaemia and take action to prevent recurrence. Inform patient if medication dose is changed
•Do not omit insulin in type 1 diabetes - treat hypoglycaemia and administer insulin as usual after dose review
•Blood glucose is likely to be high following hypoglycaemia; additional correction doses should not be given
•If receiving IV insulin treatment, check blood glucose every 30 minutes until above 4.0 mmol/L, then re-start IV insulin after review of infusion rates and
requirement for IV insulin
Algorithm for the Treatment and Management of Hypoglycaemia in Adults with Diabetes Mellitus in Hospital
Hypoglycaemia is a serious condition and should be treated as an emergency regardless of level of consciousness.
Hypoglycaemia is defined as blood glucose of less than 4mmol/L (if not less than 4mmol/L but symptomatic give a small
carbohydrate snack for symptom relief).
For further information the NHS Lothian Intranet > Healthcare > Diabetes > Metabolic Unit Handbook
Mild Moderate Severe
Patient conscious, orientated and able to Patient conscious and able to swallow, Patient unconscious/fitting or very
swallow but confused, disorientated or aggressive aggressive or nil by mouth (NBM)
Give 15-20 g of quick acting carbohydrate, such as Glucose drink - Glucojuice 90- Check ABC, stop IV insulin, contact
120mls or 150-200mls pure fruit juice** or 4-5 Glucotabs® doctor immediately
If not capable and cooperative but can swallow give 1.5-2 tubes of GlucoGel® Give IV glucose over 10 - 15 minutes as
(squeezed into mouth between teeth and gums). 75 ml glucose 20%
If ineffective, use 1mg Glucagon IM*. Or 150ml glucose 10%
Or 1mg Glucagon IM * (see below)
Test blood glucose level after 10 - 15 minutes Recheck glucose after 10 - 15 minutes
and if still less than 4 mmol/L repeat up to 3 times. and if still less than 4mmol/L, repeat
If still hypoglycaemic, call doctor and consider IV glucose 10% at 100 ml/hr** treatment.
or 1mg Glucagon IM*.