• Aust Crit Care · Nov 2009

    Hyperchloraemic metabolic acidosis slows recovery in children with diabetic ketoacidosis: a retrospective audit.

    • Lauren T Mrozik and Michael Yung.
    • Medical Emergency Team, Paediatric Intensive Care Unit/Department of Paediatric Critical Care Medicine, Women's and Children's Hospital, Adelaide, SA, Australia. lauren.mrozik@health.sa.gov.au
    • Aust Crit Care. 2009 Nov 1;22(4):172-7.

    IntroductionHyperchloraemic metabolic acidosis (HMA) can occur in diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), from urinary loss of bicarbonate precursors as ketones, or iatrogenically from chloride administration.ObjectiveTo determine whether children with DKA given normal saline developed HMA, and whether HMA delayed their recovery.Setting13 Bed combined Paediatric Intensive Care/High Dependency Unit.MethodsRetrospective analysis of the venous biochemistry of 59 admissions with DKA, recording the times to recovery from acidosis and normalisation of anion gap, and total intravenous chloride load.ResultsTwenty-nine (49%) were newly diagnosed diabetics. The median age was 12 (interquartile range, IQR 8.2-15.4) years. The initial pH in 23 (39%) was <7.1. The median times to achieve pH>7.3, bicarbonate>15mmol/l and anion gap<16.1 were 14.2h (IQR 8.6-20.1), 12.9h (IQR 8.6-20.0) and 10.7h (IQR 8.2-15.0) respectively. For individual patients, the median difference between recovery times for bicarbonate and anion gap was 0.18h (IQR 0-5.3), p=0.0005. However, in 14 patients (24%), the difference was >6h. These patients did not differ significantly in age or initial pH but had a lower initial bicarbonate (median 5 versus 7.8mmol/l, p=0.002), narrower anion gap (median 29.5 versus 31.6mmol/l, p=0.038), and took longer to normalise the bicarbonate: median 26.1 versus 10.5h, p<0.0001. They tended to be newly diagnosed presentations.ConclusionThe anion gap (AG) normalises earlier than bicarbonate in children with DKA treated with normal saline, and children with persisting HMA recover from acidosis more slowly.

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