Fluids, Electrolytes, Acid-Base Disorders, and Nutrition Support
Answer: D
Answer D, additional magnesium therapy should be
given daily for the next 4β5 days, is correct because it
takes 48 hours for magnesium to equilibrate after a short-
term infusion, making Answer A incorrect. Although
Answer B is common in clinical practice, failure to pro-
vide additional magnesium repletion in the setting of a
normal serum magnesium concentration the day after
a large intravenous dosage usually causes serum con-
centrations to decrease below the normal range again
over the next 1β2 days as magnesium equilibrates. Thus,
Answer B is not ideal management and is incorrect.
Answer C is incorrect because hypocalcemia should
autocorrect with magnesium supplementation within 48
hours of magnesium therapy; however, calcium therapy
can be given concurrently, if necessary (symptomatic or
ionized calcium concentration less than 1 mmol/L).
Answer: D
The current PN formula prescribed provides 3240 kcal/
day (42 kcal/kg/day with a glucose infusion rate of 5.8
mg/kg/minute), which is an excessive amount of energy
for this patient, and he has possible signs of overfeed-
ing in the form of hyperglycemia. Answer D is correct
because decreasing the dextrose dose to 315 g would
appropriately bring the patientβs energy down to 2101
kcal/day (27 kcal/kg/day with a glucose infusion rate
of 2.8 mg/kg/minute). An initial energy goal of 25β30
kcal/kg/day is appropriate for this patient, and by sig-
nificantly decreasing the dextrose and total energy load
provided in the PN, his hyperglycemia should improve.
Answer A is incorrect because the additional insulin
will not address the issue of overfeeding, and sliding-
scale insulin is unlikely to provide adequate glycemic
control for this patient. Answer B is incorrect because
temporarily adjusting the dextrose dose will not correct
the issue of overfeeding in the long term. Answer C is
incorrect because the total energy provided with these
changes would still provide 37 kcal/kg/day and exceed
the appropriate initial goal of 25β30 kcal/kg/day.
Answer: B
This patientβs pH is high at 7.46 mmHg so his primary
disorder is an alkalosis (Answer D is incorrect). His
serum HCO3 is 20 mEq/L (low) and Pco2 is 31 mmHg
(low). His high pH and low Pco2 indicate that his pri-
mary disorder is a respiratory alkalosis (Answer C is
incorrect). However, his laboratory values reveal an AG
of 19 (141 β 102 β 20 = 19), which indicates that a meta-
bolic acidosis is present, regardless of his pH or HCO3
values (Answer A is incorrect). His delta ratio is 1.25
([19β14] / [24β20]), which indicates that an AG meta-
bolic acidosis is present with no other hidden metabolic
process. Answer B is correct.