Abstract

BackgroundThe objective of this study was to describe the epidemiology of severe hypoglycaemia in Kuwait, aiming to provide a preliminary background to update the current guidelines and improve patient management.MethodThis was a prospective analysis of severe hypoglycaemia cases retrieved from emergency medical services (EMS) archived data between 1 January and 30 June 2020. The severe hypoglycaemia cases were then sub-grouped based on EMS personal initial management and compared in terms of scene time, transportation rate, complications and outcomes. The primary outcomes were GCS within 10–30 min and normal random blood glucose (RBS) within 10–30 min.ResultsA total of 167 cases met the inclusion criteria. The incidence of severe hypoglycaemia in the national EMS was 11 per 100,000. Intramuscular glucagon was used on scene in 89% of the hypoglycaemic events. Most of the severe hypoglycaemia patients regained normal GCS on scene (76.5%). When we compared the two scene management strategies for severe hypoglycaemia cases, parenteral glucose administration prolonged the on-scene time (P = .002) but was associated with more favourable scene outcomes than intramuscular glucagon, with normal GCS within 10–30 min (P = .05) and normal RBS within 10–30 min (P = .006). Conclusion: Severe hypoglycaemia is not uncommon during EMS calls. Appropriate management by EMS personals is fruitful, resulting in favourable scene outcomes and reducing the hospital transportation rate. More research should be invested in improving and structuring the prehospital management of severe hypoglycaemia. One goal is to clarify the superiority of parenteral glucose over intramuscular glucagon in the prehospital setting.

Highlights

  • Kuwait has a high diabetes mellites incidence, with one in every five adults in Kuwait diagnosed with diabetes mellites [1]

  • Intramuscular glucagon was used on scene in 89% of the hypoglycaemic events

  • One goal is to clarify the superiority of parenteral glucose over intramuscular glucagon in the prehospital setting

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Kuwait has a high diabetes mellites incidence, with one in every five adults in Kuwait diagnosed with diabetes mellites [1]. A common diabetic emergency is hypoglycaemia [2]. Sixty-five percent of diabetic patients experience at least one episode of hypoglycaemia annually [2]. The annualized crude incidence of hypoglycaemia is 35.1 events. In the United States, hypoglycaemic events requesting emergency medical services (EMS) place a significant burden on medical resources. 5% of all EMS calls are for hypoglycaemia [5]. EMS personnel are the first health professionals contacting the hypoglycaemic event. The objective of this study was to describe the epidemiology of severe hypoglycaemia in Kuwait, aiming to provide a preliminary background to update the current guidelines and improve patient management

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call