What is the definition of hypoglycemia?
Blood glucose <4.0mmol/L
What are the three severity levels of hypoglycemia?
What is the initial treatment for mild hypoglycemia?
15-20g quick-acting carbohydrates
Options include 5-7 Dextrosol tablets or 150-200ml fruit juice.
What should be done after administering treatment for mild hypoglycemia?
Recheck blood glucose after 10-15 minutes
What is the treatment for moderate hypoglycemia if the patient is uncooperative?
Give 2 tubes of 40% glucose gel if they can swallow
If they cannot swallow then consider IV dextrose or IM glucagon as per severe pathway
Test BG after 10-15 mins
What is the treatment for severe hypoglycemia?
100ml 20% dextrose or 200ml 10% dextrose over 15 minutes
1mg Glucagon IM if no IV access
Rechecking glucose after 10 minutes is important. If still <4 then repeat
What should be done once glucose levels rise above 4.0mmol/L after hypoglycemia treatment?
What are the diagnostic criteria for Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA)?
All three criteria must be met for diagnosis.
What is the initial management protocol for DKA?
What should be done if blood pressure is less than 90mmHg during DKA management?
Administer 500ml sodium chloride over 10-15 minutes
Re-assess. Repeat if needed
Once stabilised then start aggressive fluid resuscitation with 1L of 0.9% sodium chloride as part of DKA management
What are the types of insulin?
What is the starting dose for Multiple Daily Injections (MDI) regimen?
0.5-0.75 units/kg/day
50% is given as short acting insulin and 50% as long acting insulin. The short acting is split into 3 and will be given just before each meal
What is a common dosing strategy for Twice Daily Biphasic insulin?
0.5-0.75 units/kg of body weight split into 1/3rds… give 2/3 before breakfast and 1/3 before the eveming meal
Management of hyperglycaemia if pt is clinically well and does not have raised ketones?
If BG >25 then consider giving 6-10 units of actrapid insulin 1 off dose. Check BG after 2-4 hours. They may need a variable rate insulin infusion
If BG >18 for 24 hours or >11 for 48 hours then increase doses of oral agents or insulin doses
Types of fast-acting insulin?
Regular soluble human insulin e.. actrapid or humulin S
Short acting insulin analogues e.g. novorapid or humalog lispro
Pharmacokinetics of soluble human insulin?
Onset 30-60 mins
Peak effect 2-4 hours
Duration 6-8 hours
Pharmacokinetics of short-acting insulin analogues?
Onset 5-15 mins
Peak effect 1-2 hours
Duration 4-6 hours
Pharmacokinetics of intermediate-acting insulin ?
Onset 12 hours
Peak effect 6-10 hours
Duration 12+ hours
Examples of intermediate acting insulins (NPH insulin (isophane)?
Insulatard
Humulin I
What are examples of biphasic insulins?
Humulin M3
Novomix 30
What does the 30 of NovoMix30 mean?
30% short acting insulin
The rest is 70% NPH human insulin
Examples of long acting insulins?
Lantus - insulin glargine
Levemir - insulin detemir
Pharmacokinetics of long-acting insulins?
Onset about 1 hour
Peak effect 5 hours
Duration up to 24 hours
What are the 4 regimens for insulin?
Type 1 diabetes:
MDI - multiple daily injection regimen (basal-bolus)
Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (insulin pump therapy)
Type 2 diabetes:
Twice daily biphasic regimen (pre-mixed) - note some older T1DM pts may use this
Once daily long acting analogue