Objective: To systematically synthesize evidence from RCTs that evaluate the efficacy and safety of balanced crystalloids compared with normal saline for initial fluid resuscitation of patients with DKA.
Methods: This systematic review and meta-analysis were performed considering PRISMA guidelines and was registered in PROSPERO. A comprehensive search was performed to identify RCTs comparing balanced crystalloids with normal saline in adults and children with DKA. The risk of bias was assessed by using Cochrane RoB 2 tool. A random-effects meta-analysis was performed using R software to calculate pooled Mean Differences for continuous outcomes and Odds Ratios for dichotomous outcomes with 95% Confidence Intervals.
Results: Eleven RCTs were included. In the quantitative synthesis of six RCTs (n = 491) using continuous time-to-event data, balanced crystalloids were not associated with a statistically significant reduction in time to DKA resolution compared with normal saline (Mean Difference [MD] = -1.50 hours; 95% CI: -3.79 to 0.79; p=0.15), with moderate heterogeneity (I2 = 36.2%). The 95% prediction interval ranged from -5.44 to 2.44 hours. However, balanced crystalloids resulted in a significantly greater increase in serum bicarbonate at 12 hours (MD = +2.50 mmol/L; 95% CI: 1.51 to 3.48; p=0.004; I2 = 0.0%). Subgroup analyses by fluid type, DKA severity, and age group showed no significant subgroup differences.
Conclusion: Initial fluid resuscitation with balanced crystalloids was not associated with a shorter time to DKA resolution compared with normal saline, and they were associated with a rapid increase in serum bicarbonate levels; however, this biochemical improvement did not translate into a shorter time to DKA resolution or other clinical benefits. The choice of crystalloids for initial DKA resuscitation remains an area of clinical equipoise because of the substantial heterogeneity and methodological limitations of the available evidence, emphasizing the need for further high-quality research.
Tag Archives: diabetic ketoacidosis
Brief Report: Diabetic Keto-Acidosis (DKA) Induced Hypothermia May Be Neuroprotective in Cardiac Arrest
Despite the decreased survival associated with diabetes with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and the overall low survival to hospital discharge, we would like to present two cases of OHCA in diabetics who despite prolonged resuscitation efforts had complete neurological recovery likely due to concomitant hypothermia. There is a steady decreasing rate of ROSC with longer durations of CPR so that outcomes are best when <20 minutes compared to prolonged resuscitation efforts (>30-40 minutes). It has been previously recognized that hypothermia prior to cardiac arrest can be neurologically protective even with up to 9 hours of cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Hypothermia has been associated with DKA and although often indicates sepsis with mortality rates of 30-60%, it may indeed be protective if occurring prior to cardiac arrest. The critical factor for neuroprotection may be a slow drop to a temperature <25⁰C prior to OHCA as is achieved in deep hypothermic circulatory arrest for operative procedures of the aortic arch and great vessels. It may be worthwhile continuing aggressive resuscitation efforts even for prolonged periods before attaining ROSC for OHCA in patients found hypothermic from metabolic illnesses as compared to only from environmental exposures (avalanche victims, cold water submersions, etc.) as has been traditionally reported in the medical literature.










