The Sweet Crisis: A Case of Diabetic Ketoacidosis
Case Presentation

A 28-year-old female, known case of Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus, presented to the Emergency Department with abdominal pain, vomiting, and altered sensorium for 1 day.

  1. History:
    • Onset: Gradual, worsening
    • Missed insulin doses for 2 days due to fever and poor oral intake
    • No recent surgery or steroid intake
    • No chest pain or focal neurological deficit
    • Family history: Negative
  2. Examination (on arrival):
    • GCS: E3V4M6 = 13/15
    • Vitals:
      • Temp: 99.8°F
      • HR: 128/min (tachycardia)
      • BP: 92/60 mmHg (hypotension)
      • RR: 32/min with Kussmaul’s respiration
      • SpO₂: 96% on room air
    • General:
      • Dehydrated, fruity odor breath
    • Systemic:
      • Soft abdomen, no focal neuro deficit, lungs clear

Laboratory Findings

Parameter Patient Value Normal Range
RBS 456 mg/dL 70–140 mg/dL
Arterial pH 7.12 7.35–7.45
HCO₃⁻ 10 mEq/L 22–28 mEq/L
Anion Gap 22 8–12
Serum Ketones (β-OHB)PositiveNegative
Serum Na⁺ 132 mEq/L 135–145 mEq/L
Serum K⁺ 5.4 mEq/L 3.5–5.0 mEq/L
Serum Creatinine 1.4 mg/dL 0.6–1.2 mg/dL
Serum Osmolality 312 mOsm/kg275–295 mOsm/kg
HbA1c 9.8% <6.5%

Diagnosis

Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA) — severe, with dehydration and mild altered sensorium.

ICU Management

Day 1: Resuscitation

  1. Airway/Breathing/Circulation
    • O₂ 2 L/min via nasal cannula
    • IV access secured, cardiac monitoring started
  2. Fluid Therapy (cornerstone)
    • 1st hr: 0.9% NS, 1 L bolus
    • Next hrs: 0.9% NS @ 250–500 mL/hr, titrated to BP & urine output
  3. Insulin Therapy
    • IV Regular Insulin infusion at 0.1 units/kg/hr (started after initial K⁺ checked and fluids given)
    • Target: ↓ glucose by 50–70 mg/dL/hr
  4. Potassium Management
    • Initial K⁺ = 5.4 → insulin started without K⁺ supplementation
    • Monitored 2-hourly
  5. Electrolyte & Acid–Base Monitoring
    • ABG every 4 hrs
    • Na⁺ corrected for hyperglycemia: 132 + (1.6 × [(456–100)/100]) ≈ 138
  6. Infection Screen (precipitating cause)
    • CBC, CXR, urine culture, blood cultures

Day 2: Ongoing ICU Care

  • Blood sugar improved: 250 mg/dL
  • IV fluids changed to Dextrose 5% + 0.45% NS with KCl supplementation (to prevent hypoglycemia as ketosis resolves)
  • Insulin infusion continued at adjusted rate
  • K⁺ dropped to 3.4 → 20 mEq KCl added in fluids
  • Mental status improving

Day 3: Transition

  • Ketones negative, AG normalized
  • Shifted to subcutaneous basal-bolus insulin regimen
  • Oral feeding restarted
  • Diabetes educator counseled patient & family on insulin compliance

Complications to Watch

  • Hypoglycemia from insulin
  • Hypokalemia from insulin + fluids
  • Cerebral edema (especially in children)
  • Infections as precipitating factor

Key Learning Points

  • DKA = Hyperglycemia + High AG Metabolic Acidosis + Ketosis
  • Fluid replacement first, insulin second (after checking K⁺)
  • Always monitor K⁺, glucose, and acid–base regularly
  • Search for precipitating causes (infection, missed insulin, MI, stroke)

Short Case Story (for memory)

Imagine:
A young woman with Type 1 DM misses her insulin because she’s unwell with fever. She lands in ICU with fruity breath, deep Kussmaul breathing, and hypotension. Labs scream pH 7.12, HCO₃⁻ 10, glucose 456, AG 22.
You rush: NS first, insulin drip, watch potassium. Within 48 hrs, her acidosis resolves, she walks out educated and determined never to skip insulin again.

Quick Q&A

  1. Qus: What is the most important first step in DKA management?
    Ans: Fluid resuscitation (0.9% NS) before insulin.
  2. Qus. At what glucose level do you add dextrose to fluids during insulin infusion?
    Ans: When glucose <200–250 mg/dL but acidosis still present.
  3. Qus. What is the most feared complication of rapid correction in DKA?
    Ans: Cerebral edema (especially in children/adolescents).

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