Corrected Sodium for Hyperglycaemia
Corrected Na⁺ = Measured Na⁺ + 0.4 × (Glucose mmol/L − 5.6). Katz 1973 formula.
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Совет профессионала
A practical bedside rule in DKA: if the measured sodium is rising proportionately as glucose falls (approximately 1.6–2.4 mmol/L Na rise per 100 mg/dL glucose fall), treatment is proceeding safely. If measured sodium stays flat or falls while glucose corrects, re-evaluate fluid tonicity — you may be giving too much free water. Print the corrected sodium at every lab check as part of your DKA flow sheet.
Знаете ли вы?
The Katz correction (1.6 mmol/L per 100 mg/dL glucose) was derived theoretically in 1973 using the assumption that glucose distributes only in the extracellular space. The actual measured correction in human studies turned out to be closer to 2.4 — because glucose in high concentrations also causes protein redistribution and a mild Donnan effect. It took 26 years (until Hillier's 1999 NEJM study) to formally replace the older value with measured data.
Источники
- ›Katz MA. Hyperglycemia-induced hyponatremia — calculation of expected serum sodium depression. N Engl J Med 1973
- ›Hillier TA et al. Hyponatremia: evaluating the correction factor for hyperglycemia. Am J Med 1999
- ›Joint British Diabetes Societies Inpatient Care Group — Management of DKA in Adults 2023
- ›Kitabchi AE et al. Hyperglycemic Crises in Adult Patients With Diabetes. Diabetes Care 2009
- ›Nyenwe EA, Kitabchi AE. The evolution of diabetic ketoacidosis: An update of its etiology, pathogenesis and management. Metabolism 2016
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