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Corrected Sodium for Hyperglycaemia

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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.

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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.

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