Cerebral edema in DKA

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Background

  • Most feared complication of pediatric DKA; accounts for 50-65% of all DKA deaths[1]
  • Occurs in 0.5-1% of pediatric DKA episodes (up to 4-5% with subclinical edema on imaging)[2][3]
  • Mortality rate: 21-24%; significant neurologic morbidity (10-26%) in survivors[1][4]
  • Almost all affected patients are <20 years old[3]
  • Mental status abnormalities (GCS <14) occur in 4-15% of children treated for DKA and are often associated with mild cerebral edema on imaging[1]

Pathophysiology

  • Previously attributed to osmotic shifts with rapid IV fluid administration; this model has been largely disproven
  • Current understanding favors cerebral hypoperfusion and reperfusion injury during DKA treatment as the primary mechanism[5][1]
  • Cerebral edema has been found on imaging even before treatment is initiated, including in children found dead at home from undiagnosed DKA[1]
  • Bicarbonate administration is independently associated with cerebral edema (persists after correcting for DKA severity) — avoid bicarbonate in pediatric DKA[6]

Risk Factors

  • Age <5 years
  • New-onset diabetes (first DKA presentation)
  • Severe acidosis (pH <7.1, pCO₂ <20)
  • Higher BUN at presentation (marker of dehydration severity)[6]
  • Failure of corrected sodium to rise with treatment[6]
  • Severe hyperosmolality
  • Bicarbonate administration[6]
  • Late presentation for medical evaluation
  • Previous episodes of DKA
  • Overaggressive fluid resuscitation is NOT a proven risk factor — the PECARN FLUID trial (1,389 episodes) showed neither fluid rate nor sodium content significantly affected neurologic outcomes[5]


Clinical Features

  • Typically begins 4-12 hours after onset of therapy, but may occur before treatment or up to 48 hours later[1]
    • Many children appear to be improving from DKA before deteriorating from cerebral edema
    • Can occur at presentation in new-onset diabetes (including type 2)[1]

Warning Signs (use Muir Criteria for early detection)

Diagnostic criteria (any ONE is diagnostic):[4]

  • Abnormal motor or verbal response to pain
  • Decorticate or decerebrate posture
  • Cranial nerve palsy (especially III, IV, VI)
  • Abnormal neurogenic respiratory pattern (grunting, tachypnea, Cheyne-Stokes, apneusis)

Major criteria:[4]

  • Altered mentation / fluctuating level of consciousness
  • Sustained heart rate deceleration (>20 bpm decrease) not attributable to improved intravascular volume or sleep
  • Age-inappropriate incontinence

Minor criteria:[4]

  • Vomiting
  • Headache
  • Lethargy or difficulty arousing
  • Diastolic BP >90 mmHg
  • Age <5 years

Interpretation: 1 diagnostic criterion, OR 2 major criteria, OR 1 major + 2 minor criteria → 92% sensitivity and 96% specificity for cerebral edema[4]

  • GCS alone is not sensitive enough — use the Muir criteria above[4]
  • Perform a thorough baseline neurologic exam (including cranial nerves) at presentation and document it so colleagues can identify changes


Differential Diagnosis

Hyperglycemia

Diabetic Emergencies

Diabetes Mellitus (New or Known)

Medication/Drug-Induced

Physiologic Stress Response

  • Sepsis / critical illness (stress hyperglycemia — very common in the ED)
  • Trauma / major surgery / burns
  • Acute coronary syndrome / myocardial infarction
  • Stroke (especially hemorrhagic)
  • Pancreatitis (both a cause and consequence)
  • Shock (any etiology)
  • Pain (catecholamine surge)
  • Seizure (postictal)
  • Physiologic stress alone rarely causes glucose >200 mg/dL in non-diabetics; glucose >200 in a "stress response" should prompt evaluation for undiagnosed diabetes or prediabetes

Endocrine

Pancreatic

  • Pancreatitis (acute or chronic — destruction of islet cells)
  • Pancreatic malignancy (adenocarcinoma, neuroendocrine tumors)
  • Post-pancreatectomy
  • Cystic fibrosis-related diabetes
  • Hemochromatosis (iron deposition in pancreas — "bronze diabetes")

Toxic/Overdose

Other

  • Renal failure (chronic kidney disease, acute kidney injury — impaired insulin clearance AND insulin resistance)
  • Cirrhosis / hepatic failure (impaired glycogenolysis regulation)
  • Pregnancy (gestational diabetes, steroid administration for fetal lung maturity)
  • Parenteral nutrition (TPN, dextrose-containing fluids)
  • Post-transplant diabetes (immunosuppressants)

Complications of Diabetes (Not Causes of Hyperglycemia)

These are associated conditions that may be present alongside hyperglycemia but do not themselves cause elevated glucose:


Evaluation

  • Cerebral edema in DKA is a CLINICAL diagnosis — do NOT delay treatment for imaging[1][4]
  • Capillary glucose measurement immediately to rule out hypoglycemia as the cause of altered mental status
  • Head CT (non-contrast) — obtain after treatment has been initiated, NOT before[1]
    • CT may be normal early (sensitivity is limited); used primarily to rule out other pathology (hemorrhage, thrombosis)
    • CT may show diffuse cerebral edema, small ventricles, or loss of sulcal markings
  • Monitor corrected sodium during DKA treatment — failure of corrected sodium to rise as glucose falls suggests excess free water and increased risk[6][1]
    • Corrected Na = Measured Na + [1.6 × (glucose – 100) / 100]

Monitoring During DKA Treatment (Prevention)

  • Hourly neurologic assessments for the first 12 hours of DKA therapy (minimum), including cranial nerves[1]
    • Increase frequency to q30min in children <5 years or with pH <7.1
  • Avoid bicarbonate administration[6]
  • Follow corrected sodium — should trend upward during treatment[1]


Management[1][2]

Treat IMMEDIATELY when suspected — do not wait for imaging

Immediate Actions

  • Elevate head of bed to 30 degrees
  • Reduce IVF rate by one-third
  • Avoid intubation unless absolutely necessary (loss of hyperventilatory drive worsens cerebral edema)[1]
    • If intubation is required, maintain pCO₂ near pre-intubation level — avoid aggressive hyperventilation (associated with worse outcomes)[7]

Hyperosmolar Therapy

  • Give whichever agent is immediately available — do NOT delay treatment[8]
  • Mannitol 0.5-1 g/kg IV over 20 minutes[1]
    • May repeat in 30 min to 2 hours if inadequate response
    • Historically the most commonly used agent; best studied in this specific population
    • Disadvantage: causes osmotic diuresis (may worsen dehydration)
  • 3% Hypertonic saline 3-5 mL/kg (or 250 mL) IV over 15-30 minutes[1][8]
    • Increasingly used in pediatric ICU settings
    • One retrospective study (DeCourcey 2013) found hypertonic saline as sole agent was associated with higher mortality than mannitol alone (OR 2.71), though this had significant limitations[9]
  • If initial therapy is ineffective, give the other agent (i.e., if mannitol given first, try 3% saline; and vice versa)[1]

Additional Measures

  • Consult neurosurgery and PICU/ICU immediately
  • Treat noncardiogenic pulmonary edema if present
  • Hold insulin infusion during acute treatment of cerebral edema (the priority shifts to managing intracranial pressure)
  • Consider ICP monitoring in consultation with neurosurgery


Disposition

  • Admit PICU/ICU — all patients
  • Mortality remains high (21-24%) even with treatment; early recognition and treatment provides the best chance for good outcomes[1]


Pearls

  • Cerebral edema is a CLINICAL diagnosis — treat first, image after
  • Use the Muir criteria (not just GCS) for early detection — 92% Sn, 96% Sp
  • Perform and document a thorough neuro exam at the start of DKA treatment so changes can be identified
  • The old dogma that "rapid IVF causes cerebral edema" has been disproven by the PECARN FLUID trial[5]
  • Never give bicarbonate in pediatric DKA — it is an independent risk factor for cerebral edema[6]
  • Give whichever osmolar agent (mannitol or 3% saline) is immediately available — do not delay searching for one over the other
  • If you must intubate, match the pre-intubation pCO₂ — iatrogenic normalization of CO₂ worsens cerebral edema
  • A child improving from DKA who suddenly deteriorates = cerebral edema until proven otherwise


See Also


References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 Glaser N, Fritsch M, Priyambada L, et al. ISPAD Clinical Practice Consensus Guidelines 2022: Diabetic ketoacidosis and hyperglycemic hyperosmolar state. Pediatr Diabetes. 2022;23(7):835-856. doi:10.1111/pedi.13406
  2. 2.0 2.1 Cooke & Plotnick. Management of diabetic ketoacidosis in children and adolescents. Pediatr Rev. 2008 Dec;29(12):431-5
  3. 3.0 3.1 Glaser NS, Wootton-Gorges SL, Buonocore MH, Marcin JP, Rewers A, Strain J, et al. Frequency of subclinical cerebral edema in children with diabetic ketoacidosis. Pediatr Diabetes. Apr 2006;7(2):75-80.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 Muir AB, Quisling RG, Yang MC, Rosenbloom AL. Cerebral edema in childhood diabetic ketoacidosis: natural history, radiographic findings, and early identification. Diabetes Care. 2004 Jul;27(7):1541-6.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Kuppermann N, Ghetti S, Schunk JE, et al. Clinical Trial of Fluid Infusion Rates for Pediatric Diabetic Ketoacidosis. N Engl J Med. 2018;378(24):2275-2287. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1716816
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 Glaser N, Barnett P, McCaslin I, et al. Risk factors for cerebral edema in children with diabetic ketoacidosis. N Engl J Med. 2001;344(4):264-269.
  7. Marcin JP, Glaser N, Barnett P, et al. Factors associated with adverse outcomes in children with diabetic ketoacidosis-related cerebral edema. J Pediatr. 2002;141(6):793-797.
  8. 8.0 8.1 BSPED Guideline for the Management of Children and Young People under the age of 18 years with Diabetic Ketoacidosis. 2021.
  9. DeCourcey DD, Steil GM, Wypij D, Agus MS. Increasing use of hypertonic saline over mannitol in the treatment of symptomatic cerebral edema in pediatric diabetic ketoacidosis: an 11-year retrospective analysis of mortality. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2013;14(7):694-700.