This document discusses diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) during pregnancy. It defines DKA and outlines its epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, differential diagnosis, prevention, treatment, and complications. DKA is a medical emergency that occurs more commonly in pregnant women with poorly controlled diabetes. During pregnancy, DKA can develop more rapidly due to insulin resistance. Treatment involves rehydration, insulin therapy, electrolyte correction, and monitoring of both mother and fetus until metabolic stability is achieved. Fetal monitoring is important given risks of distress, death, or developmental impacts from maternal acidosis and electrolyte disturbances.
Escort Service Call Girls In Sarita Vihar,, 99530°56974 Delhi NCR
Management of Diabetic Ketoacidosis in Pregnancy
1. Dr/ Ahmed Walid Anwar Morad
Professor of OB/GYN
Benha University
2018
2. This talk spotlights on
• Definition
• Epidemiology
• Pathophysiology
• Diagnosis
• Differential diagnosis
• Prevention
• Treatment
• Pitfalls in DKS
3.
4. Epidemiology
• DKA is an acute medical emergency
associated with:
- Fetal loss rates more than 50%.
- Maternal mortality rates less than
1%.
5. Epidemiology
• DKA in pregnancy most commonly occurs in
women with:
- Poorly controlled :
*T1DM
*T2DM or GDM under
- Glucocorticoids
- B-agonists / tocolytics
- First presentation of T1DM in pregnancy
9. DKA is common during pregnancy
WHY?
• Pregnancy is a stat of Relative insulin resistance
especially in 2nd
& 3rd
trimesters.
• Increased levels of HPL ,E, P & Cortisol
act as insulin antagonists& impair maternal
insulin sensitivity.
• Pregnancy is a state of respiratory alkalosis associated
with a compensatory drop in bicarbonate levels; this
impairs the renal buffering capacity.
10. Precipitating factors of DKA in
pregnancy
• Insufficient or no insulin
• Protracted vomiting
• Hyperemesis gravidarum
• Starvation
• Infections
• Medications precipitating DKP
• Conditions such as diabetic gastroparesis
11. Diagnosis of DKA in pregnancy
• DKP may be
the first
presentatio
n of diabetes
in pregnancy
13. Pitfalls in DKA
• Potassium level may be falsely normal/elevated.
• High
– WBC count without infection.
– Blood urea with prerenal azotemia due to dehydration.
– Creatinine in absence of true impairment of renal function.
– Serum amylase even in absence of pancreatitis.
14. What is different in pregnancy?
• DKA occurs at lower blood
glucose level (Euglycaemic DKA)
• DKA can develop more rapidly
than in non-pregnant women
• Nausea and vomiting are common.
18. Multidisciplinary approach
Patient monitoring in HDU
Consider
1. IV line
2. Arterial line
3. Urinary catheter (if not
producing urine after 3
hours).
4. 4. Nasogastric tube (if
drowsy / vomiting).
ICU admission
• pH < 7.0
• Altered consciousness
• Poor response to acute
resuscitation
• More intensive
monitoring anticipated
(e.g. K+, intercurrent
illness)
19.
20. Management of DKA in pregnancy
Goals
1. Re-hydration (IV fluid therapy)
2. Normalization of serum glucose (IV insulin
therapy)
3. Electrolyte correction
4. Correction of acidemia (need for bicarbonate)
5. Elimination of the underlying cause
6. Monitoring of maternal and fetal responses
21. -Hourly intake and output. Foley catheter ??
- Goal is correction of total fluid deficit over 12-24 hours.
- After BP and urine output stabilize may change fluids to 0.45 NS at
250-500 cc/hr and then may decrease infusion rate
- Avoid lactate-containing solution as this will aggravate acidosis.
-
Aim
Volume deficit
Time
Monitor
Type
Rate
Hypercholermic
acidosis
23. Phosphate
• Not usually indicated.
• Considered if severe hypophosphataemia
(<0.35mmol/L) +/- cardiorespiratory
depression
24. Correction of acidosis
• The use of bicarbonate is
not recommended why?
1. Bicarbonate inhibits the
compensatory
hyperventilation → ↑ CO2
partial pressure → ↓ fetal
oxygen delivery
2. Paradoxical fall in CSF PH.
3. Delays the wash out of
ketones
4. Worsen hypokalaemia
• Consider
Bicarbonate:
1. PH < 6.9
2. PH < 6.9 with
homodynamic
instability
3. Hyperkalemia
with EG changes
• Limited
studies
28. Fetal considerations
b. Fetuses exposed to maternal acidosis, dehydration and
electrolyte disturbance (K+) may have:
Decreased variability and late decelerations or even fetal death.
The ominous patterns will typically correctable with correction of maternal
metabolic disturbance (4–8 hours) .
Maternal oxygen therapy is always useful in nonreassuring
fetal heart rate.
Fetal biophysical profile and Doppler studies may also reflect
the fetal acidotic status.
29. Fetal considerations
c. Delivery decision should be individualized according to:
– Maternal clinical status
– Gestational age
– The results of fetal investigations such as fetal heart
tracing.
d. Delivery of a compromised fetus should be
undertaken ONLY after the mother is
metabolically stable.
30. Fetal considerations
• Continue the pregnancy with complete resolution
of DKP.
• After complete resolution of DKP, further fetal
monitoring especially in preterm fetus is not
recommended.
Mode of delivery is guided by fetal ,maternal
and obstetrical indications.
31. Fetal considerations
Avoid use of Betamimetics and corticosteroids while
DKA is being controlled.
The best practice, however, is aimed at educating the
patient to avoid further recurrence of DKP, and
an increased surveillance to ensure adequate
diabetic control and compliance with treatment.
32. Take home message
1.DKA during pregnancy is a life-threatening
condition.
2. Rapid diagnosis with rapid initiation of a
multidisciplinary team management could help to
reduce maternal and fetal mortality, and morbidity.
3. Decreased variability and late decelerations or even
fetal death are common findings.
33. Take home message
4.The ominous patterns will typically correctable with
correction of maternal metabolic disturbance.
5. Avoid use of Betamimetics and corticosteroids while
DKA is being controlled.
6. Delivery decision should be individualized.
7. Delivery should be undertaken ONLY after the mother is
metabolically stable.
34. Take home message
8. Continue the pregnancy with complete resolution of
DKA.
9. Mode of delivery is guided by fetal, maternal and
obstetrical indications.
10. Patient education will form the main framework to
reduce the risks associated with DKA.