TY - JOUR
T1 - Effectiveness of low-dose continuous intravenous insulin infusion in diabetic ketoacidosis. A prospective comparative study
AU - Edwards, George A.
AU - Kohaut, Edward C.
AU - Wehring, Barbara
AU - Hill, L. Leighton
N1 - Funding Information:
From the Renal-Metabolic Section, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, and Texas Children's Hospital, Ben Taub General Hospital Supported by The Kelsey and Leary Foundation Grant 952; The Beta Sigma Phi Metabolic Research Fund of the Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine; United States Public Health Service Training Grant 5-TO1-AM-05432; RR-OO188 from the General Clinical Research Center Program of the Division of Research Resources, National Institutes of Health.
PY - 1977/11
Y1 - 1977/11
N2 - Twenty pediatric patients with diabetic ketoacidosis were randomly assigned in equal numbers to receive insulin either as alow-dose continuous intravenous infusion or as high-dose intermittent subcutaneous injections. Blood was obtained hourly for determinations of total CO2, plasma glucose, and osmolality, and, in previously untreated patients, plasma insulin. Serum values of beta hydroxybutyrate, electrolytes, and acetone were monitored every two hours. Plasma insulin levels were in the therapeutically effective range with each method of administration. There were no statistically significant differences in rate os correction of ketoacidosis, rate of reduction of plasma glucose, or decline in plasma osmolality. The incidence and the severity of hypokalemia were increased in the patients receiving subcutaneous insulin There was less variation in the rate of reduction of plasma glucose in the infusion group. Low-dose continuous intravenous infusion of insulin is at least as effective in treating diabetic ketoacidosis as the traditional high-dose intermittent subcutaneous injection of insulin and offers some definite advantages.
AB - Twenty pediatric patients with diabetic ketoacidosis were randomly assigned in equal numbers to receive insulin either as alow-dose continuous intravenous infusion or as high-dose intermittent subcutaneous injections. Blood was obtained hourly for determinations of total CO2, plasma glucose, and osmolality, and, in previously untreated patients, plasma insulin. Serum values of beta hydroxybutyrate, electrolytes, and acetone were monitored every two hours. Plasma insulin levels were in the therapeutically effective range with each method of administration. There were no statistically significant differences in rate os correction of ketoacidosis, rate of reduction of plasma glucose, or decline in plasma osmolality. The incidence and the severity of hypokalemia were increased in the patients receiving subcutaneous insulin There was less variation in the rate of reduction of plasma glucose in the infusion group. Low-dose continuous intravenous infusion of insulin is at least as effective in treating diabetic ketoacidosis as the traditional high-dose intermittent subcutaneous injection of insulin and offers some definite advantages.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0022-3476(77)81018-4
DO - 10.1016/S0022-3476(77)81018-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 409824
AN - SCOPUS:0017695317
SN - 0022-3476
VL - 91
SP - 701
EP - 705
JO - Journal of Pediatrics
JF - Journal of Pediatrics
IS - 5
ER -