POTD: Alcoholic Ketoacidosis

Today’s topic will be for the people who used this 3-day weekend for a bender:

Alcohol Ketoacidosis (AKA)

Clinical Scenario:

Someone who has been on a bender and shows up to your ED after two days of vomiting, has a low bicarb, elevated anion gap, elevated lactate, urine ketones, and an elevated BHB level...probably has AKA. 

Background

  • Alcoholic ketoacidosis (AKA) is a starvation state in an alcoholic or binge drinker

  • Alcohol + No Food + Dehydration = AKA

  • Most often associated with acute cessation of alcohol consumption after chronic alcohol abuse

  • Can also be associated with first-time alcohol binge

  • one of the causes of anion-gap metabolic acidosis 

Clinical Features

  • episode of heavy drinking followed by vomiting and an acute decrease in alcohol consumption

  • N/V, nonspecific abdominal pain

  • can have associated gastritis or pancreatitis

  • normal mental status, but if patient is altered, look for toxic alcohol ingestion, postictal states from withdrawal seizures, or occult head injury

  • exam with acetone odor on breath

  • tachypnea (Kussmaul respiration), tachycardia, and signs of dehydration

Pathophysiology

ethanol metabolism.png

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD, or “Needs Additional Dextrose”) is depleted by ethanol metabolism, leading to inhibition of the Kreb’s cycle (or aerobic metabolism) in favor of ketone formation, depletion of glycogen stores, and suppression of insulin secretion  

Diagnosis

  • low, normal, or slightly elevated glucose

  • binge-drinking that ends in N/V and decreased intake

  • wide AG metabolic acidosis, especially one without an alternative diagnosis

  • (+) serum ketones

  • can have associated hypophosphatemia, hyponatremia, and hypokalemia

Treatment

  • Sugar and water!

  • Glucose stimulates insulin production, which stops lipolysis and halts further ketone formation. Glucose also increases oxidation of NADH to NAD, thereby further stopping ketone production. 

  • Start with 5% dextrose in NS. Once fluid and electrolyte losses are replaced, change fluids to 5% dextrose in 1/2 NS until oral intake is assured.

  • Give 100 mg thiamine (facilitates Krebs cycle)

  • Correct electrolytes

  • Repeat Chem7 to see if bicarb improving. If it’s not, consider ethylene glycol or methanol poisoning. This is the time for fomepizole and a call to your local toxicologist or poison center!

Disposition

Discharge if tolerating PO!

References

https://emcrit.org/toxhound/aka-aka/

https://lifeinthefastlane.com/ccc/alcoholic-ketoacidosis/

Tintanelli’s

 ·