Diabetes mellitus (main)

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Background

  • Growing in worldwide prevalence
  • Results from either inability of the body to release insulin from the pancreas or a resistance against the actions of insulin

Clinical Features

  • Patients with diabetes may be asymptomatic
  • Acute symptoms range from those of nonketotic hyperglycemia (e.g. polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia) to DKA (ill appearance, acetone breath, Kussmaul's breathing, somnolence)

Differential Diagnosis

Hyperglycemia

Diabetic Emergencies

Diabetes Mellitus (New or Known)

Medication/Drug-Induced

Physiologic Stress Response

  • Sepsis / critical illness (stress hyperglycemia — very common in the ED)
  • Trauma / major surgery / burns
  • Acute coronary syndrome / myocardial infarction
  • Stroke (especially hemorrhagic)
  • Pancreatitis (both a cause and consequence)
  • Shock (any etiology)
  • Pain (catecholamine surge)
  • Seizure (postictal)
  • Physiologic stress alone rarely causes glucose >200 mg/dL in non-diabetics; glucose >200 in a "stress response" should prompt evaluation for undiagnosed diabetes or prediabetes

Endocrine

Pancreatic

  • Pancreatitis (acute or chronic — destruction of islet cells)
  • Pancreatic malignancy (adenocarcinoma, neuroendocrine tumors)
  • Post-pancreatectomy
  • Cystic fibrosis-related diabetes
  • Hemochromatosis (iron deposition in pancreas — "bronze diabetes")

Toxic/Overdose

Other

  • Renal failure (chronic kidney disease, acute kidney injury — impaired insulin clearance AND insulin resistance)
  • Cirrhosis / hepatic failure (impaired glycogenolysis regulation)
  • Pregnancy (gestational diabetes, steroid administration for fetal lung maturity)
  • Parenteral nutrition (TPN, dextrose-containing fluids)
  • Post-transplant diabetes (immunosuppressants)

Complications of Diabetes (Not Causes of Hyperglycemia)

These are associated conditions that may be present alongside hyperglycemia but do not themselves cause elevated glucose:

Evaluation

  • Diabetes mellitus itself is not normally a diagnosis sought in the emergency department (i.e. via A1C)
  • Hyperglycemia can be found on laboratory testing
    • Asymptomatic patients do not necessarily require additional testing
    • Symptomatic or potentially symptomatic patients require additional testing
      • Check CBC, BMP, and ketones (if sick, additionally see DKA workup)
      • UA is only necessary if you are ruling out urinary infection or do not have serum ketones available and are using it as a screening mechanism
      • Obtaining HbA1c prior to initiation of therapy helpful to establish a baseline

American Diabetes Association Diagnostic Criteria

Need 1 of the following:[1]

  • HbA1C ≥6.5%
  • FPG ≥126mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L). Fasting is defined as no caloric intake for at least eight hours
  • Two-hour plasma glucose ≥200mg/dL (11.1 mmol/L) during an oral glucose tolerance test
  • In a patient with classic symptoms of hyperglycemia or hyperglycemic crisis, a random plasma glucose ≥200mg/dL (11.1 mmol/L)
    • Most common way diagnosed in ED

Management

Type II Diabetes Outpatient Management

  • 1st line: Metformin 500mg BID → 1000mg BID, do not give in people with abnormal LFT's, CHF Stage 3/4 and ARI, CKD
  • 2nd Agent: Glipizide start 2.5mg BID → 5mg BID, need to monitor for hypoglycemia
  • 3rd Agent: Pioglitazone
  • After 3 agents: need to start insulin if not controlled
    • NPH BID or Lantus Qday (0.1 to 0.2mg/kg) and titrate to Fasting Blood Sugar

Disposition

Calculators

Corrected Sodium

Corrected Sodium for Hyperglycemia
Parameter Value
Measured Sodium (mEq/L)
Serum Glucose (mg/dL)
Results
Corrected Na⁺ (Katz, 1.6 mEq per 100 mg/dL) mEq/L
Corrected Na⁺ (Hillier, 2.4 mEq per 100 mg/dL) mEq/L
References
  • Katz MA. Hyperglycemia-induced hyponatremia — calculation of expected serum sodium depression. N Engl J Med. 1973;289(16):843-844. PMID 4763428.
  • Hillier TA, Abbott RD, Barrett EJ. Hyponatremia: evaluating the correction factor for hyperglycemia. Am J Med. 1999;106(4):399-403. PMID 10225241.
  • Classic formula (Katz): Corrected Na = Measured Na + 1.6 × (Glucose − 100) / 100
  • Revised formula (Hillier): Corrected Na = Measured Na + 2.4 × (Glucose − 100) / 100 (preferred when glucose >400)

See Also

References

  1. American Diabetes Association. Standards of medical care in diabetes--2013. Diabetes Care 2013; 36 Suppl 1:S11.
  2. EBQ:Relevance of Discharge Glucose Levels