| Literature DB >> 21423557 |
Jennifer Ruth Foster1, Gavin Morrison, Douglas D Fraser.
Abstract
Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a state of severe insulin deficiency, either absolute or relative, resulting in hyperglycemia and ketonemia. Although possibly underappreciated, up to 10% of cases of intracerebral complications associated with an episode of DKA, and/or its treatment, in children and youth are due to hemorrhage or ischemic brain infarction. Systemic inflammation is present in DKA, with resultant vascular endothelial perturbation that may result in coagulopathy and increased hemorrhagic risk. Thrombotic risk during DKA is elevated by abnormalities in coagulation factors, platelet activation, blood volume and flow, and vascular reactivity. DKA-associated cerebral edema may also predispose to ischemic injury and hemorrhage, though cases of stroke without concomitant cerebral edema have been identified. We review the current literature regarding the pathogenesis of stroke during an episode of DKA in children and youth.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21423557 PMCID: PMC3056450 DOI: 10.4061/2011/219706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke Res Treat
Case reports of arterial ischemic stroke, cerebral venous thrombotic stroke, and hemorrhagic stroke associated with an episode of DKA in children and youth.
| Patient number | Age (year) | Gender | Pathologic findings | Clinical Presentation | Outcome | Coagulation profile | Reference number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arterial Ischemic Stroke. | |||||||
| 1 | 0.25 | female | Multiple small vessel thrombi with edema on autopsy | First presentation diabetes, generalized seizure, progressive coma on admission | Death at 24 hours | [ | |
| 2 | 4 | female | Infarction, right posterior cerebral artery distribution | First presentation diabetes, decerebrate posturing, acute herniation | Slowly regained ability to walk and comprehend speech | Low protein C normalized with treatment, elevated Factor VIII-vWF complex, elevated plasma and platelet thromboxane B2 | [ |
| 3 | 8 | male | Infarction of left thalamus, left temporal lobe, B/L occipital lobes | Decerebrate posturing | Slow recovery | Low protein C antigen, normalized | [ |
| 4 | 10 | unknown | Basilar artery thrombosis on CT | Restless, decreasing LOC over 4.5 hours, respiratory arrest at 7 hours | Persistent vegetative state | [ | |
| 5 | 14 | female | CT edema and infarction of left lentiform nucleus, thalami, B/L peduncles | Headache, deteriorating LOC. Pupils midline, fixed, dilated after 12 hours | Mild left hemiparesis, behavioral disturbances | [ | |
| 6 | 5 | male | Infarction left posterior cerebral artery distribution, geniculate nuclei, left thalamus | First presentation diabetes, generalized seizure | Moderate left hemiplegia | Low protein S, elevated factor VIII and factor V | [ |
| 7 | 6 | male | Infarction B/L anterior cerebral artery distributions, basal ganglia, left cingulate gyrus | First presentation diabetes, lethargy and posturing of upper extremities | Emotionally labile, intellectual and motor impairment | Low AT III antigen, AT III functionally normal, increased platelet aggregation | [ |
| 8 | 7 | male | Ischemia in globus pallidus, B/L cingulate gyri. Infarctions left thalamus, right medial occipital lobe. No CT edema | First presentation diabetes, decreased level of consciousness with incontinence, stiffness, pupils poorly reactive | Hemiplegia, normal cognition, abnormal behavior and affect, | Decreased platelet aggregation | [ |
| 9 | 8 | male | Infarction thalamus, midbrain, basal ganglia, cingulated gyrus. No CT edema | First presentation diabetes, unresponsive, flaccid, pupils dilated | Vegetative state | Low aPTT (21 seconds) | [ |
| 10 | 10 | male | Infarction right anterior cerebral artery distribution, left putamen, B/L globus pallidus | First presentation diabetes, decreased LOC, left extensor posturing, abnormal papillary response | Severe focal neurologic impairment | [ | |
| 11 | 6 | female | Infarction proximal left middle cerebral artery, left basal ganglia | First presentation diabetes, irritability, lethargy, right hemiparesis, aphasia. Had 2 mitral valve thrombi | Regained speech, residual right hemiparesis | Normal pro-thrombotic studies | [ |
| 12 | 18 | female | Infarction right common carotid artery territory with distal emboli in right anterior and middle cerebral arteries | First presentation diabetes, left hemiparesis 10 hours after carotid artery puncture | Moderate clinical recovery | [ | |
| Cerebral Venous Thrombosis. | |||||||
| 13 | 5 | female | Thrombosis of straight sinus and vein of Galen. Infarction of basal ganglia, thalamus | Confusion, decreased LOC, rigidity, fisting. Significant iron deficiency anemia | Mild learning difficulties | Normal clotting screen and thrombophilia screen | [ |
| 14 | 11 | male | Multiple areas of infarction on MRI without hemorrhage or edema | Headache, nausea and vomiting, acute deterioration with fixed, dilated pupils. Had DVT of right superficial femoral and popliteal veins | Brain death | Decreased protein C function (36%), normal protein S and factor VIII, no anticardiolipins. Heterozygous factor V Leiden | [ |
| 15 | 19 | female | Superior sagittal sinus thrombosis | First presentation diabetes. Anxiety progressed to psychosis, dysphasia, left abducens palsy, right inferior facial palsy, tetraparCsis with upper motor neuron signs | Partial left abducens paresis with diplopia which resolved | coagulopathy screen negative | [ |
| 16 | 8 | male | Vein of galen and superior sagittal sinus thrombosis. B/L medial cerebral hemisphere infarctions | First presentation diabetes, loss of consciousness, sluggish pupillary reaction, fever | GCS remained 6 when transferred to another hospital | Low platelets, decreased ATIII (60.4%) increased with treatment, elevated D-dimer, increased with treatment | [ |
| 17 | 1.1 | female | Left transverse sinus thrombosis, no infarction | First presentation of thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia, associated with nonimmune insulin-dependent diabetes. Right-sided focal seizure | Normal neurologic status | Prothrombotic screening negative | [ |
| 18 | 10 | female | Thrombosis of superior sagittal, straight, right transverse, right sigmoid and proximal posterior left transverse sinuses | Headache, 6th cranial nerve palsy day 3, decreased level of consciousness day 5 | Recombinant tPA thrombolysis, complete recovery | Heterozygous mutation of the prothrombin gene (G20210A) | [ |
| Hemorrhagic infarction. | |||||||
| 19 | 11 | female | Multiple large, B/L posterior temporal lobe hematomas | Behavioral disturbance, lethargy, progressed to unresponsive, pupils dilated and unreactive | Normal neurologic exam | [ | |
| 20 | 1 | unknown | Subarachnoid hemorrhage on CT | Sudden respiratory arrest | Died at 2 days | [ | |
| 21 | 11 | unknown | Subarachnoid hemorrhage on CT | Progressively worsening neurologic status | Death | [ | |
| 22 | 6.5 | unknown | CT suggestive of subarachnoid hemorrhage | Severe headache and restless. Pupils fixed, dilated at 3 hours, respiratory arrest at 6 hours | Death | [ | |
| 23 | 9 | female | Hemorrhagic infarction right caudate nucleus, anterior limb of internal capsule. Non-hemorrhagic infarction of B/L thalami with edema | Ataxia, deteriorating LOC, abnormal respiratory pattern,. Developed decorticate posturing, right-sided tonic seizure | Communication disorder, asymmetric spastic quadriparesis, behavior disturbances. | [ | |
| 24 | 9 | female | Edema and hemorrhagic infarctions basal ganglia, upper brain stem, medial temporal lobes, frontal lobes, occipital lobes | Decreased LOC, left exotropia, unequal and unreactive pupils, papilledema | Quadriplegia, absent oculocephalic reflexes, central right facial paresis, profound cognitive defects | [ | |
| 25 | 15 | female | No cerebral edema in first 24 hours on CT. Multiple small hematomas, mainly parieto-occipital, on day 12 MRI | First episode diabetes. Significant hypotension, unconscious at presentation. Neurologically normal day 4. Bilateral knee clonus, extensor plantar response and peripheral nerve palsies on day 7 | Decreased platelets (85,000), normal coagulation profile | [ | |
| 26 | 11 | female | Normal MRI. On autopsy: pin-point hemorrhages with ring-and-ball morphology in hemispheric white matter, throughout brainstem and spinal cord | First presentation diabetes, Hypotension, rapid deterioration in LOC | Death from renal complications | Normal coagulation studies | [ |
| 27 | 14 | female | Petechial hemorrhages in B/L subcortical white matter U fibers, genu of corpus callosum, posterior limb of internal capsule, frontal lobe on MRI | First presentation diabetes, significant hypotension. Unresponsive and dyspneic | Short term memory loss, moderate cognitive deficits | Normal coagulation studies | [ |
| 28 | 5 | female | Hemorrhagic infarct left thalamus | First presentation diabetes. Right central facial palsy, right hemiplegia, right babinski sign on day 7 of treatment | Mild learning difficulties | normal bleeding studies, normal protein C and S at time of hemorrhage | [ |
LOC: level of consciousness; B/L: bilateral; tPA: tissue plasminogen activator.
Coagulation abnormalities noted in cases of pediatric DKA with stroke and in studies of DKA-associated coagulopathy in adults and children. Pretreatment abnormalities include those noted prior to resolution of biochemical abnormalities. Posttreatment abnormalities include those noted after resolution of biochemical abnormalities.
| Factor | Parameter | Pre-treatment abnormality | Post-treatment abnormality | Pediatric versus adult study | Relevant references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Platelet | count | pediatric | [ | ||
| aggregation/ | pediatric, adult | [ | |||
| Thromboxane B2 | production | pediatric | [ | ||
| Prothrombin time | pediatric | [ | |||
| Partial thromboplastin time | levels | pediatric | [ | ||
| Tissue Factor | levels | adult | [ | ||
| vWF | antigen level | pediatric | [ | ||
| activity | pediatric | [ | |||
| Factor VIII-vWF complex | levels | pediatric | [ | ||
| Factor V | levels | pediatric | [ | ||
| Factor VII | levels | pediatric | [ | ||
| Factor VIII | levels | pediatric | [ | ||
| Homocysteine | levels | pediatric | [ | ||
| Folate | levels | pediatric | [ | ||
| Prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 | levels | adult | [ | ||
| Thrombin-antithrombin III complex | levels | adult | [ | ||
| Antithrombin III | levels and activity | pediatric, adult | [ | ||
| Protein C | activity | pediatric | [ | ||
| antigen level | pediatric | [ | |||
| Protein S | Free protein level | pediatric | [ | ||
| Thrombomodulin | levels | adult | [ | ||
| tPA | activity | adult | [ | ||
| antigen level | adult | [ | |||
| PAI-1 | activity | adult | [ | ||
| antigen level | adult | [ | |||
vWF: von Willebrand Factor; tPA: tissue plasminogen activator; PAI-1: plasminogen activator inhibitor-1.
Figure 1White matter hemorrhages associated with DKA. (a) This low-power view of a gyrus (stained with hematoxylin, eosin, and Luxol fast blue) illustrates multiple small and microscopic hemorrhages (arrowheads) associated with “confluent” pallor (asterisks) of the myelin, a thin layer of preserved subcortical myelin (arrows), and normal cortex. (b) A vessel, labeled V, is identified for reference. Stained with Luxol fast blue, hematoxylin, and eosin (which stains myelin blue). Central hemorrhage was formed by perivascular necrosis (arrow), a concentric ring of red blood cells, and diffusely rarefied white matter that is speckled with eosinophilic astrocytes (arrowheads). Figure 1 reproduced with permission from Pediatrics, volume 126, page 1543, copyright 2007 by the AAP.,