Hypoglycemia
Revision as of 19:20, 25 March 2015 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)
Background
Pediatric Hypoglycemia Dextrose Chart
| Category | Age | Glucose | Treatment | Initial IV Bolus | Maintenance Dose |
| Neonatal | <2mo | <40 | D10W | 2.5-5 mL/kg | 6 mL/kg/h |
| Pediatric | 2mo-8yrs | <60 | D25W | 2 mL/kg |
D10W:
|
| Adult | >8yrs | <70 | D50W | 50mL (1 amp) OR 1 mL/kg |
- Consider diluting the D25W or D50W bolus, with NS 1-to-1, as those concentrations may be sclerosing to veins
- Recheck 5 minutes after dose and repeat dose if low.
- Consider glucagon IM/SQ if IV access is not readily available
Diagnosis
- Symptoms consistent with the diagnosis
- Symptoms associated with a low glucose level, usually <50
- Symptoms resolve with glucose administration
Differential Diagnosis
- Medication-induced
- Sepsis
- Toxin
- Insulinoma
- Hepatic failure
- Adrenal insufficiency
Treatment
ED or Prehospital
- D50
- Oral glucose intake
- Glucagon[1]
- Efficacy dependent on hepatic glycogen stores
- Onset of action slower than IV dextrose (7-10min)
- 1mg SC or IM
Hypoglycemia from Sulfonylureas[2][3]
Activated charcoal[4]
- Administer activated charcoal, preferably within 1 hr of ingestion
- Multiple doses may be beneficial, especially for glipizide
Glucose Treatment
- Initial therapy regardless of known cause
- Adults
- 50mL D50W bolus
- Start a D10 1/2NS drip (100mL/hr)
- Children
- 1mL/kg of D50W OR
- 2mL/kg D25W OR 5-10mL/kg D10W
- Neonate: 5-10 mL/kg D10W
Octreotide[5]
- Theoretical benefit to reduce risk of recurrent hypoglycemia
- Hyperpolarization of the beta cell results in inhibition of Ca influx and prevents insulin release
- 50-100 mcg subcutaneous in adults with repeat dosing Q6hrs
- 2 mcg/kg (max 150mcg) subcutaneously Q6hrs should be used in children
- Continuous infusion of 50-125 mcg/hr is an alternative in adults
- Administer octreotide for 24 hours, then after discontinuing, monitor for hypoglycemia for another 24 hours
Special Considerations
- Glucagon 5mg IM may be used as temporizing measure, e.g. while obtaining IV access
Hypoglycemia from Long Acting Insulin
- Similar treatment as for Sulfonylureas except no role for Octreotide
- Treatment should include oral PO intake as well as maintenance glucose containing drip either D5 or D10
Disposition
Consider admission for obs for sulfonylurea-induced hypoglycemia or long acting insulins
See Also
Sources
- ↑ Carstens S, Sprehn M. Prehospital treatment of severe hypoglycaemia: a comparison of intramuscular glucagon and intravenous glucose. Prehosp Disaster Med. 1998 Apr-Dec;13(2-4):44-50
- ↑ Rowden AK, Fasano CJ. Emergency management of oral hypoglycemic drug toxicity. Emerg Med Clin N Am 2007; 25:347-356
- ↑ Howland MA. Antidotes in Depth: Octreotide. In: Flomenbaum NE, Goldfrank LR, Hoffman RS et al, eds: Goldfrank’s Toxicologic Emergencies. New York NY, 2006;770-773
- ↑ Tran D et al. Oral Hypoglycemic Agent Toxicity Treatment & Management. Jul 14, 2015. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1010629-treatment#showall.
- ↑ Fasano CJ et al. Comparison of Octreotide and standard therapy versus standard therapy alone for the treatment of sulfonylurea-induced hypoglycemia. Ann Emerg Med 2008; 51:400-406
