Skip to main content
Calkulon

Praktiniai

DKA Fluid & Insulin Calculator

For informational purposes only. This tool is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.

Detailed Guide Coming Soon

We're working on a comprehensive educational guide for the DKA Fluid & Insulin Calculator. Check back soon for step-by-step explanations, formulas, real-world examples, and expert tips.

💡

Pro Tip

The key monitoring parameter in DKA is ketone clearance, not glucose. Target a ketone fall of at least 0.5 mmol/L per hour. If ketones are not clearing at 1–2 hours despite adequate fluid and insulin, increase the insulin infusion by 1 unit/hour and reassess. When glucose drops below 14 mmol/L, add dextrose-saline rather than reducing insulin — you still need insulin to clear the ketones.

Difficulty:Advanced

Did you know?

The first clinical description of diabetic ketoacidosis was made by Apollinaire Bouchardat in Paris in 1875, who noted the sweetish smell of acetone on the breath of dying diabetic patients. Before insulin was discovered in 1921, DKA was universally fatal. Today, mortality in specialised centres is below 0.5%, representing one of the most dramatic improvements in medical outcomes of the 20th century.

Mathematically verified
Reviewed May 2026
Used 30K+ times
Our methodology
🔒
100% Nemokama
Niekada be registracijos
Tikslu
Patikrintos formulės
Momentiška
Rezultatai rašant
📱
Mobiliesiems
Visi įrenginiai

Nustatymai

PrivatumasSąlygosApie© 2026 Calkulon