Read Essential Facts on the Go: Internal Medicine Online
Authors: Lauren Stern,Vijay Lapsia
Tags: #Medical, #Family & General Practice, #Internal Medicine
Prepare for SQ insulin once
– AG is closed × 2
– FS < 250
How much insulin did the patient receive in the past 6 hours?
– (Amount × 4) × 80% = total daily insulin need
– Total daily insulin need
50% basal (long acting)
50% pre-meal (short acting)
Ex: insulin GTT @ 5 units/hr for last 6 hrs
– 5 × 4 = 20 unit × 80% = 16 units
– 50% basal = 8 units of long-acting insulin now
– 50% pre-meal = ~ 3 units of short-acting insulin pre-meal
Keep insulin GTT on × 2 hrs after giving long-acting basal insulin to prevent hyperglycemia
Management of Electrolyte Abnormalities
Potassium/hypokalemia
Monitor K+ levels every 3 hours
Insulin will cause K+ to shift intracellularly
Keep serum K+ between 4-5 mEq/L
If K+ < 4 prior to initiating insulin therapy
Severe total body K+ depletion