Diferencia entre revisiones de «Alcoholic ketoacidosis»

Línea 66: Línea 66:
*[[Anion Gap (High)]]
*[[Anion Gap (High)]]
*[[Acid-Base Disorders]]
*[[Acid-Base Disorders]]
*[[Beer Potomania Syndrome]]
*[[Alcohol (ETOH) Intoxication]]
*[[Alcoholic ketoacidosis]]
*[[Alcohol withdrawal]]
*[[Alcohol withdrawal: Inpatient management]]
*[[Alcohol withdrawal: Outpatient management]]
*[[Alcohol withdrawal seizures]]
*[[Altered mental status]]
*[[Delerium tremens]]
*[[EBQ:Outpatient use of benzodiazepines for the treatment of acute alcohol withdrawal]]
*[[Sedative/Hypnotic]]
*[[Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome]]


==References==
==References==

Revisión del 11:50 8 jul 2016

Background

  • Seen in patients with recent h/o binge drinking with little/no nutritional intake
  • Anion gap metabolic acidosis a/w acute cessation of ETOH consumption after chronic abuse
  • Characterized by high serum ketone levels and an elevated AG
    • Consider other causes of elevated AG, as well as co-ingestants
    • Concomitant metabolic alkalosis can occur from dehydration (volume depletion) and emesis

Pathophysiology

  • Ethanol metabolism depletes NAD stores
    • Results in inhibition of Krebs cycle, depletion of glycogen stores, and ketone formation
    • High NADH:NAD also results in increased lactate production
      • Lactate higher than normal but not as high as in shock or sepsis
    • Acetoacetate is metabolized to acetone so elevated osmolal gap may also be seen
AKA crashingpatient.JPG

Clinical Features

Differential Diagnosis

Ethanol related disease processes

Diagnosis

  • Binge drinking ending in nausea, vomiting, and decreased intake
  • Wide anion gap metabolic acidosis (ketonemia, lactic acidosis)
  • Positive serum ketones
  • Wide anion gap metabolic acidosis without alternate explanation
  • Urine ketones may be falsely negative or low
    • Lab measured ketone is acetoacetate
    • May miss beta-hydroxybutyrate

Management

Consider associated diseases (ie pancreatitis, rhabdo, hepatitis, infections)

Disposition

  • Discharge home after treatment if able to tolerate POs and acidosis resolved
  • Consider admission for those with severe volume depletion and/or acidosis
  • Hypoglycemia is poor prognostic feature, indicating depleted glycogen stores

See Also

References