Journal Home
Search for

Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 23-27 (September 1996)


View previous. 5 of 10 View next.

Acid-base and electrolyte disturbances in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis

Moses S. Elisaf, Agathoklis A. Tsatsoulis, Kostas P. Katopodis, Kostas C. SiamopoulosCorresponding Author Information

Received 2 April 1996; received in revised form 22 July 1996; accepted 9 September 1996.

Abstract 

We undertook the present study to examine the acid-base and electrolyte disturbances in relation to hydration status in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA). A total of 40 insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus patients (22 male, 18 female), aged 18–61 years with DKA admitted to our hospital during the last 2 years, were studied. The duration of diabetes averaged 9 ± 2 years. In all cases a detailed investigation of the acid-base status and electrolyte parameters was performed. Twenty-one patients had a pure metabolic acidosis with an increased serum anion gap, seven had DKA combined with hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, nine had DKA coexisting with metabolic alkalosis, while three had DKA with a concurrent respiratory alkalosis. Hydration status as evidenced by the ratio of urea/creatinine seems to play an important role in the development of mixed acid-base disorders (detected by changes in the ratios Δ anion gap/Δ bicarbonate () and sodium/chloride ()). In fact, hyperchloremic acidosis developed in the patients with the better hydration status. However, contradictorily, the severely dehydrated patients who experienced recurrent episodes of vomiting developed DKA with a concurrent metabolic alkalosis. Finally, patients with pneumonia or gram-negative septicemia exhibited DKA combined with a primary respiratory alkalosis. We conclude that patients with DKA commonly develop mixed acid-base disorders, which are partly dependent on patients' hydration status.

No full text is available. To read the body of this article, please view the PDF online.

Department of Internal Medicine, University of Ioannina Medical School, GR 451 10 Ioannina, Greece

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +30 65 146728; fax: +30 65 145944.

PII: S0168-8227(96)01332-0


View previous. 5 of 10 View next.