Information
Editors
Hyperglycaemic Hyperosmolar Syndrome
Essentials
- Manage an acutely ill patient with hyperglycaemia before he/she enters coma.
 - Do not confuse this condition with ketoacidosis Diabetic Ketoacidosis.
 - The condition is associated with significant mortality (20-50%)
 
Predisposing factors
- Hyperglycaemia-inducing medication (diuretics, glucocorticoids)
 - Operations and comparable stress-creating situations, e.g. myocardial or cerebral infarction, burns
 - Acute severe infections
                    
- Pneumonia
 - Diabetic gangrene
 - Pyelonephritis
 - Sepsis
 - Gastroenteritis leading to dehydration
 
                   - Chronic diseases and excessive diuretics
                    
- Renal failure
 - Heart failure
 
                   - Low fluid intake and dehydration because of various underlying causes
 - Neglecting the treatment of diabetes
 - Acromegaly or Cushing's syndrome
 
Symptoms and findings
- The patient usually has type 2 diabetes. Hyperglycaemic hyperosmolar syndrome (HHS) may sometimes be the first manifestation of diabetes.
 - Fever is a common finding. The cause is usually an infection but remember that an infected patient may often be non-febrile.
 - Signs of dehydration
 - Thirst, polyuria, fatigue, decreased level of consciousness and other neurological symptoms, for example convulsions, aphasia, hemiparesis
 
Laboratory findings
- Plasma glucose usually > 25 mmol/l
 - No ketoacidosis, pH > 7.30 and bicarbonate concentration > 15 mmol/l (blood gas analysis)
 - Only mild ketonuria or ketonaemia
 - Haemoglobin, hematocrit, leukocyte count and plasma creatinine are usually elevated, associated with dehydration.
 
Treatment
- Febrile hyperglycaemia can be treated in primary care while HHS requires intensive care.
 - Principles of therapy
                    
- Recognize the condition immediately.
 - Provide sufficient (re)hydration with Ringer solution.
 - Manage the electrolyte imbalance.
 - Correct hyperglycaemia with rapid-acting insulin.
 - Treat infection effectively after samples have been obtained (urine and blood cultures, etc).
 - Prophylactic therapy for thombosis with low-molecular-weight heparin is often indicated.
 
                   
Implementing fluid and insulin therapy
- Water deficiency is considerable (6-10 l) and its treatment should be started before insulin therapy
                    
- Ringer solution 2 000 ml within the first 1.5-2 hours
 - Thereafter, based on corrected sodium concentration, Ringer solution, 0.45% NaCl solution or 0.9% NaCl solution 500 ml/hour until plasma glucose HASH(0x2fdd750) 15 mmol/l
 - 5% glucose solution until dehydration has resolved
 
                   - Insulin (primarily as intravenous infusion)
                    
- Starting dose of rapid-acting insulin 0.15 units/kg i.v. or 20 units i.m.
 - 0.1 units/kg/h as an i.v. infusion or 0.1 units/kg i.m. at 1-hour intervals. The dosage is adjusted according to the results of glucose monitoring.
 - When plasma glucose is < 15 mmol/l add long-acting insulin. Infusion should still be continued for about 4 hours after administering the long-acting insulin.
 - Later the patient may be managed by oral medication or even with a controlled diet only.
 
                   - Potassium
- When diuresis starts and plasma potassium concentration is HASH(0x2fdd750) 4 mmol/l, potassium is given 20-25 mmol/hour, monitoring the potassium concentration.