Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2023) 95 P105 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.95.P105

BSPED2023 Poster Presentations Diabetes 3 (12 abstracts)

Management of diabetic ketoacidosis in 0 to 16 years presenting to the Southern Health and Social Care Trust between January 2020 and September 2022

Shilpa Shah , Shane McVeigh , Rebekah Murphy , Asma Abdin & Sarinda Millar


Southern Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast, UK


Introduction: Diabetic Ketoacidosis is a life threatening emergency. BSPED has updated their guideline with changes in the fluid management (bolus dose for shock, de-escalate early use of inotropes, percentage dehydration in moderate DKA and maximum weight)

Aims: To determine the clinical features and outcome of new presentations of DKA in 0–16 year age range and audit fluid management

Methods: Patients 0-16 years presenting as new diagnosis of DKA over 18 months were recorded and management analyzed.

Results: 35 patients with DKA within 132 new diagnosis of type 1 diabetes in 0–16 Mean age 8 ½ years; youngest 16 months 18 male 17 female 20 self-presented to Emergency Department, 1 to ward, 14 GP referrals 16 Severe, 5 Moderate, 14 Mild DKA Paediatric Intensive Care admission in 6 patients. 15 patients had complications, hypokalaemia in 11 patients Average length of stay in hospital was 4.1 days Signs of Shock noted in 12 patients Fluid bolus appropriately administered in 33 patients. 1 had a 20 mL/kg bolus given when not shocked, 1 had a 10 mL/kg bolus when in shock and in severe DKA All 35 patients had percentage dehydration estimated appropriately

Maintenance fluids: Maintenance fluids were calculated appropriately in 30 patients. Of the 4 patients with inappropriate maintenance fluids, 1 had wrong estimated weight 3 did not get 10/kg bolus subtracted Dose of Insulin dose n=34 as one patient went to PICU prior to starting insulin infusion due to difficult access 29 started with 0.05 U/kg per hour and 5 had 0.1 U/kg per hour. 3 patients subsequently had insulin increased from 0.05 to 0.1 U/kg per hour. The average duration on the DKA protocol was 21 hours with a range of 8 hours to 2 days and 18 hours

Conclusions: A third of all cases of new diagnosis presented in DKA Male to Female ratio almost equal Just under half were severe DKA Less than 20% required PICU Fluid management was appropriate in over 90% of the cases with commonest error being maintenance fluid. Hypokalemia was the commonest complication and noted in 30% of all DKA despite appropriate fluid management There were cerebral edema or mortality

Volume 95

50th Annual Meeting of the British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes

Manchester, UK
08 Nov 2023 - 10 Nov 2023

British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes 

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