Treatment of Non-Diabetic Ketoacidosis
Non-diabetic ketoacidosis (NDKA) is treated primarily with intravenous dextrose-containing fluids and electrolyte replacement, NOT insulin, since the underlying pathophysiology differs fundamentally from diabetic ketoacidosis. 1
Key Distinction from Diabetic Ketoacidosis
The critical difference in NDKA management is that these patients have normal or low glucose levels and do not require insulin therapy. 1 The two main forms of NDKA are:
- Starvation ketoacidosis: Plasma glucose ranges from mildly elevated to hypoglycemic (rarely >250 mg/dl), with serum bicarbonate usually not lower than 18 mEq/l 1
- Alcoholic ketoacidosis (AKA): Can present with profound acidosis but typically has low to normal glucose levels, often with hypoglycemia 1
Initial Assessment and Diagnosis
Perform the same comprehensive laboratory evaluation as for DKA to establish the diagnosis and rule out other causes of high anion gap metabolic acidosis: 1
- Plasma glucose (will be <250 mg/dl, often low)
- Serum ketones and urine ketones
- Electrolytes with calculated anion gap
- Arterial blood gases
- Serum osmolality
- Blood urea nitrogen/creatinine
- Complete blood count with differential
- Electrocardiogram
Clinical history is essential to distinguish NDKA from DKA—look specifically for alcohol use history, recent fasting/starvation, or eating disorders. 1
Fluid Resuscitation
Begin with isotonic saline (0.9% NaCl) at 15-20 ml/kg/hour during the first hour to restore intravascular volume and renal perfusion. 1 However, unlike DKA:
- Add dextrose-containing fluids early (typically 5% dextrose in 0.45% or 0.9% saline) once initial volume resuscitation is complete 2
- The glucose infusion stimulates endogenous insulin release and suppresses ketogenesis 2
- Continue dextrose-containing fluids until ketoacidosis resolves (typically 24-48 hours) 2
Electrolyte Management
Potassium Replacement
- Add 20-30 mEq/L potassium to IV fluids once renal function is assured and serum potassium <5.3 mEq/L 1
- Maintain serum potassium between 4-5 mEq/L throughout treatment 3
- Total body potassium deficits average 3-5 mEq/kg in ketoacidosis 1
Other Electrolytes
- Monitor and replace magnesium (typical deficit 3-5 mmol/kg) and phosphate (typical deficit 5-7 mEq/kg) as needed 1
- Phosphate replacement is indicated only if serum phosphate <1.0 mg/dl or in patients with cardiac dysfunction, anemia, or respiratory depression 1, 4
Bicarbonate Therapy
Bicarbonate administration is generally not recommended unless pH <6.9, as studies have failed to show beneficial effects on clinical outcomes. 1, 4 If pH remains <7.0 after initial hydration:
- Administer 100 mmol sodium bicarbonate in 400 ml sterile water at 200 ml/h for pH <6.9 4
- Administer 50 mmol sodium bicarbonate in 200 ml sterile water at 200 ml/h for pH 6.9-7.0 4
Monitoring During Treatment
- Check blood glucose every 1-2 hours 3
- Draw blood every 2-4 hours for serum electrolytes, glucose, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, osmolality, and venous pH 3, 4
- Follow venous pH (typically 0.03 units lower than arterial pH) and anion gap to monitor resolution of acidosis 1, 4
Resolution Criteria
- Venous pH >7.3
- Serum bicarbonate ≥18 mEq/L
- Anion gap ≤12 mEq/L
- Clinical improvement with resolution of nausea/vomiting
Critical Pitfalls to Avoid
- Never administer insulin in NDKA—this will worsen hypoglycemia and is unnecessary since endogenous insulin production is intact 1, 2
- Failure to provide adequate dextrose will prolong ketogenesis and delay resolution 2
- Inadequate potassium monitoring during treatment can lead to dangerous hypokalemia as acidosis corrects 1
- Missing the underlying cause—always investigate for alcoholism, eating disorders, prolonged fasting, or other precipitating factors 1, 2
Special Considerations
In alcoholic ketoacidosis specifically: 1
- Thiamine 100 mg IV should be given before glucose administration to prevent Wernicke's encephalopathy
- Screen for concurrent alcohol withdrawal and treat appropriately
- Investigate for other alcohol-related complications (pancreatitis, hepatitis, gastritis)
In starvation ketoacidosis: 2
- Resolution typically occurs within 24-48 hours with dextrose-containing fluids alone 2
- Address underlying eating disorder or cause of prolonged fasting
- Gradual refeeding may be necessary to avoid refeeding syndrome in severely malnourished patients
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