Index
Module 13 • GI/Endocrine
Hepatic Failure, GI & Endocrine Emergencies
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Hepatic Failure, GI & Endocrine Emergencies
Stephanie N. Bass ~3 min read Module 13 of 20
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Hepatic Failure/GI/Endocrine Emergencies

2Causes

Hypoglycemia can be caused by excessive insulin administration, reduced intake of glucose (rarely

the cause of severe hypoglycemia in the absence of insulin administration), decreased insulin

resistance (weight loss, adrenal or pituitary insufficiency), decreased clearance of insulin (renal or

hepatic insufficiency), or other drugs (commonly sulfonylureas, meglitinides, and ethanol; possibly

pentamidine, quinine, quinolones, insulin-like growth factor 1, Ξ²-blockers, or ACE inhibitors).

In a retrospective cohort study of mixed ICU patients, independent predictors of hypoglycemia

(BG less than 45 mg/dL) included continuous venovenous hemofiltration with bicarbonate-based

replacement solution (OR 14; 95% CI, 1.8–106), a decrease of nutrition without adjustment for

insulin infusion (OR 6.6; 95% CI, 1.9–23), diabetes (OR 2.6; 95% CI, 1.5–4.7), insulin use (OR 5.3;

95% CI, 2.8–11), sepsis (OR 2.2; 95% CI, 1.2–4.1), and inotropic support (OR 1.8; 95% CI, 1.1–2.9).

Other studies of critically ill patients have identified renal insufficiency, diabetes, mechanical

ventilation, female sex, greater severity of illness, longer ICU stay, liver disease, immunocompromised

state, and medical or nonelective admission as risk factors for hypoglycemia.

d.Renal insufficiency in the setting of insulin administration should be particularly noted because

patients with renal failure have decreased clearance of insulin, which may prolong the duration of

hypoglycemia.

3

Management

For conscious patients without severe symptoms, oral glucose should be ingested (juice, soda, or

dextrose tablets).

The typical initial glucose dose is 15 g, which should be repeated in 15–20 minutes if symptoms

have not improved or if BG remains low.

ii.

Because the response to this β€œrescue glucose” is transient (less than 2 hours), it should be

followed by more substantial glucose intake as a snack or meal.

Parenteral therapy is necessary for patients unable to take glucose orally or hospitalized patients

with moderate or severe hypoglycemia.

Glucagon 1 mg promotes hepatic glucogenesis and glycogenolysis. It is a useful therapy for

patients with type 1 diabetes (often outside a health care setting) and those without diabetes,

but it is less useful in patients with type 2 diabetes because it stimulates insulin secretion and

glycogenolysis. Nausea/vomiting is a common adverse effect of glucagon.

ii.

Hospitalized patients with severe hypoglycemia (either severe symptoms or BG less than 40

mg/dL) or those receiving an insulin infusion with BG less than 70 mg/dL (less than 100 mg/

dL in neurologic injured patients) should be treated with intravenous dextrose.

(a)Insulin infusion should be discontinued, as appropriate.
(b)Administer 10–20 g of 50% dextrose solution (20–40 mL of 50% dextrose in water).
(c)The BG measurement should be repeated in 15 minutes, with additional dextrose doses

administered to achieve a BG greater than 70 mg/dL.

(d)Care should be taken to avoid excessive dextrose administration in order to avoid

iatrogenic hyperglycemia and because glucose variability has been associated with

adverse outcomes.

(e)To prevent hypoglycemia, the insulin regimen should be reassessed if BG is less than 100

mg/dL.

E.Thyroid Crisis
1

Clinical presentation

Thyroid crisis is characterized by severe manifestations of hyperthyroidism.

Diagnosis can be established on the basis of clinical presentation in a patient with laboratory

evidence of hyperthyroidism.

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