Abstract

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a critical manifestation in patients with diabetes mellitus. DKA has been conventionally diagnosed by the presence of hyperglycemia (blood glucose levels > 250mg/dl) and metabolic acidosis (blood gas bicarbonate [HCO3 -] < 18mmol/l and pH in blood gas < 7.30). However, quantitative evaluation of serum ketone bodies has not been established. The current study investigates serum ketone body levels in patients suspected for DKA. We have retrospectively evaluated patients with hyperglycemia whose serum ketone body levels at the outpatient clinic and emergency department were measured simultaneously with blood gas analysis during 2011-2019. Clinical backgrounds, severity of diabetes, serum ketone bodies, and blood gas factors were analyzed. Seventy-two patients were enrolled in the study, after the exclusion of patients who had ketosis due to factors other than diabetes. Serum ketone body levels were negatively correlated with the levels of blood HCO3 - and pH. By receiver-operating-characteristic curve analyses, optimal cut-off values for diagnosis of DKA were determined at 6.3mmol/l of beta-hydroxybutyrate, 1.4mmol/l of acetoacetate, and 8.0mmol/l of total ketone body, respectively. Moreover, serum ketone bodies appeared to effectively differentiate between type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus. The cut-off values were higher than those in previous reports. Serum ketone body levels were thought to be useful in the diagnosis of DKA. Further investigations with increased numbers of patients are required to establish the appropriate application of serum ketone bodies in patients with DKA. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s13340-022-00581-2.

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