Ketone monitoring is particularly important when patients with type
1 diabetes are sick or have consistently high glucose levels, the
authors write in Diabetes Care.
“Ketones occur when the body burns fat instead of using
carbohydrates for fuel,” lead author Anastasia Albanese-O’Neill told
Reuters Health by email.
“If high glucose levels and ketones remain untreated, there is an
increased risk for a life-threatening condition called diabetic
ketoacidosis, which requires hospitalization,” said
Albanese-O’Neill, a pediatrics researcher at the University of
Florida in Gainesville.
Dangerously high ketone levels can happen to anyone with diabetes,
though the problem is rare in people with type 2, according to the
American Diabetes Association.
People with type 1 diabetes have lost the ability to produce any
insulin, so ketones can occur when insulin doses are missed, or when
the body’s insulin requirements rise due to stress or illness, she
said.
“Monitoring for ketones as recommended allows for early detection
and treatment. Ketone testing supplies are available over the
counter without a prescription at a local pharmacy and online,”
Albanese-O’Neill said.
About 5 percent of people with diabetes have type 1, according to
the American Diabetes Association.
Type 1 diabetes is most commonly diagnosed in young kids, and for
that reason it used to be called juvenile diabetes. But the disease
does not go away, and it can also be first diagnosed in adulthood.
While children usually have caregivers to help them manage the
disease, adults typically need to manage it themselves.
Part of that management is regularly testing urine or blood for high
levels of ketones. To see how well patients keep up with this
requirement, researchers examined data from about 3,000 people who
answered an online questionnaire
Participants included parents of children 4 to 12 years old and
adults aged 18 to 89.
More than 60 percent of participants had urine ketone testing kits
at home and 18 percent had blood ketone monitors, researchers found.
But about one third of the respondents did not have any ketone
testing supplies in their homes at the time of the survey.
If cost or other factors are a barrier to obtaining supplies, these
need to be identified and remedied, Albanese-O’Neill said.
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Overall, 30 percent of the study participants said they never
checked for ketones, and 20 percent said they rarely checked. Young
kids were more likely to have been tested for ketones compared to
adults.
“If they are uncertain when they should be checking for ketones, or
don’t know how to test, they should ask their diabetes care team for
additional education and training. This is a fundamental diabetes
self-management skill for people with type 1 diabetes,”
Albanese-O’Neill said.
Diabetes care providers and educators should never assume their
patients with type 1 diabetes know the proper protocol for ketone
monitoring, she added.
“Some may have been diagnosed before ketone testing was the standard
of care, others may never have been taught, and still others may
have been so overwhelmed with the diagnosis that the knowledge was
lost,” Albanese-O’Neill said.
The diabetes care team has the opportunity during routine visits to
evaluate patients’ understanding of ketone monitoring, and provide
education and training as needed, she said.
“Somewhere around 1 in 300 or 400 children in the United States
develop type 1 diabetes,” said Dr. Michael Gottschalk, associate
director of the Pediatric Diabetes Research Center at the University
of California, San Diego, who wasn’t involved in the study.
There has been a steady 3 percent annual increase in the number of
cases in Europe and the U.S. over the last decade, if not longer, he
added.
Gottschalk thinks parents are good at checking ketones in their
young children. “But when it gets to adolescence that becomes an
issue just in terms of compliance, and it seems that obviously,
adults are no better or even worse than the adolescents,” he said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2k6isJr Diabetes Care, online January 18,
2017.
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