Sentences with phrase «for diabetic ketoacidosis»

Mental health symptoms have been associated with admissions for diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA; Bryden, Dunger, Mayou, Peveler, & Neil, 2003; Dumont et al., 1995; Goldston, Kovacs, Obrosky, & Iyengar, 1995; Liss et al., 1998).
The ketone strips you are using are probably for diabetics, and so you are testing for diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA).

Not exact matches

(Note: this is not the same thing as ketoacidosis, which is a dangerous condition for diabetics when blood glucose and ketones in the body become elevated.)
Even in these rare population groups that can get into ketoacidosis (uncontrolled diabetics), BHB can actually be helpful for these individuals if they are using their medical insulin as it will help the body become more efficient at using ketones as fuel.
Be on guard for any symptoms of diabetic ketoacidosis by monitoring your blood sugar and ketone levels.
If you're on the ketogenic diet, it's a good idea to test your ketone levels to make sure you are not at risk for developing diabetic ketoacidosis.
Though the ketogenic diet is quite safe and even beneficial for diabetics, there is sometimes a chance a patient can develop diabetic ketoacidosis.
We would like to emphasize that ketosis is a completely physiological mechanism and it was the biochemist Hans Krebs who first referred to physiological ketosis to differentiate it from the pathological keto acidosis seen in type 1 diabetes.8 In physiological ketosis (which occurs during very - low - calorie ketogenic diets), ketonemia reaches maximum levels of 7/8 mmol / l (it does not go higher precisely because the CNS efficiently uses these molecules for energy in place of glucose) and with no change in pH, whereas in uncontrolled diabetic ketoacidosis it can exceed 20 mmol / l with a concomitant lowering of blood pH9, 10 (Table 1).
«I've seen cats get brought in after collapsing in diabetic ketoacidosis, which is essentially when they've been hyperglycemic for so long that the muscle and organ tissue starts to break down.
Not for use during diabetic emergencies, including diabetic coma Pets who have stopped eating, are anorexic, vomiting, showing signs of extreme drowsiness or fatigue and / or showing signs of severe ketoacidosis Cats with liver, kidney or thyroid disease or a serious infection, illness or trauma Pregnant and nursing cats Known to be ineffective in cats resistant to insulin therapy Pets known to have had an allergic reaction to glipizide or other sulfa drugs Directions:
If diabetic ketoacidosis is diagnosed, the next step is to see a board - certified veterinary internal medicine specialist for an evaluation, he advises.
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