Hepatic Failure/GI/Endocrine Emergencies
Adrenal crisis (i.e., acute adrenal insufficiency or Addisonian crisis) is a life-threatening disorder
caused by glucocorticoid (and possibly mineralocorticoid) deficiency.
Adrenal crisis necessitating hospital admission has an incidence of 3.3 per 100 patient-years in
those with chronic adrenal insufficiency.
Critical illnessβrelated corticosteroid insufficiency (CIRCI) is a separate entity from adrenal crisis.
The prevalence of CIRCI is about 10%β20% but depends on the definition used and the population
evaluated. Prevalence rates as high as 60% for patients with septic shock have been reported.
Clinical presentation of DKA
Current guidelines define DKA as a combination of hyperglycemia (BG greater than 200 mg/dL
or prior history of diabetes), ketosis (positive urine or serum ketones), and acidosis (pH less than
7.30 and/or bicarbonate concentration less than 18 mmol/L). Patients with severe DKA present with
severe acidemia (pH less than 7), a serum bicarbonate less than 10 mmol/L, and depressed mental
status (stupor or coma).
Guidelines were updated with a new definition of hyperglycemia in 2024 to reflect the increasing
percentage of patients who present with euglycemic DKA.
Serum glucose concentrations are usually less than 800 mg/dL but may be more elevated in
patients who are comatose. In the setting of starvation, pregnancy, treatment with insulin prior to
presentation, or use of sodium-glucose- cotransporter 2 inhibitors, glucose may be normal or only
mildly elevated.
A lack of insulin leads to reduced glucose uptake, which, together with increased counterregulatory
hormone (catecholamines, cortisol, glucagon, and growth hormone) release, leads to increased
lipolysis. The released free fatty acids are metabolized in the liver to ketone bodies (Ξ²-hydroxybutyrate
and acetoacetate), resulting in ketonemia and elevated anion gap metabolic acidosis.
| d. | Although symptoms may exist for a few days, ketoacidosis occurs quickly, and patients may |
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deteriorate rapidly.
Typically occurs in young, leaner patients with type 1 diabetes
Patients may present with symptoms of nausea and vomiting (80% of patients; more indicative of
DKA than of HHS), polyuria, polydipsia, weight loss, abdominal pain (30% of patients), and fruity
breath from acetone in the blood. Signs of DKA include tachycardia, poor skin turgor, hypotension
(because of intravascular volume loss from osmotic diuresis), and Kussmaul respirations (due to
severe acidemia).
Measured serum potassium may be high because hyperosmolality, and lack of endogenous insulin
causes intracellular potassium ions to shift into the extracellular space. However, patients typically
have a relative deficiency of total body potassium, which can be worsened with insulin treatment.
HHS is defined as BG greater than 600 mg/dL and elevated serum osmolarity (calculated effective
serum osmolality greater than 300 mOsm/kg or total serum osmolality greater than 320 mOsm/kg)
with pH greater than 7.3 and serum bicarbonate greater than or equal to 15 mmol/L. Ketones are
not present or only measured in small amounts.
HHS presentation is often later in the disease course than DKA (because of the lack of ketosis),
and symptoms evolve over days to weeks. Patients also have higher degrees of dehydration owing
to osmotic diuresis.
More common in older patients with obesity with type 2 diabetes
| d. | Signs and symptoms, including electrolyte abnormalities, are similar to those in DKA. However, |
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confusion is much more apparent in HHS and is directly related to the serum osmolality.