Hypoglycemia Basics
Hyperglycemia Basics
Treatment Options
Monitoring and Prevention
Special Populations
100

What defines hypoglycemia in the first 48-72 hours of life?

Blood glucose less than 40-45 mg/dL

100

What blood glucose level defines hyperglycemia?

Greater than 150 mg/dL

100

What is the recommended dose range for glucose gel?

200-400 mg/kg of 40% dextrose gel

100

When should the first glucose check be done for an IDM?

Within the first hour of life

100

Which group of infants has the highest risk of hyperglycemia?

Extremely low birth weight infants

200

Name three signs of symptomatic hypoglycemia

Jitteriness, poor feeding, lethargy, apnea, or seizures

200

Name two complications of neonatal hyperglycemia

Increased risk of IVH and increased risk of sepsis

200

At what glucose concentration must IV fluids be given centrally?

Greater than 12.5% dextrose

200

How long should at-risk infants be monitored for hypoglycemia?

Minimum 24 hours or until glucose stable

200

Why are SGA infants at risk for hypoglycemia?

Limited glycogen stores due to limited nutrient transfer in utero

300

What is the primary difference in glucose metabolism between term and preterm infants?

Preterm infants have limited glycogen stores due to missing third trimester storage period

300

What is the initial intervention for hyperglycemia?

Decrease glucose infusion rate (GIR)

300

What is the initial D10W bolus dose for symptomatic hypoglycemia?

2 mL/kg

300

What is the target glucose range after 72 hours of life?

60-70 mg/dL or higher

300

What percentage of IDM babies typically develop hypoglycemia?

20-35%

400

Explain why IDM babies are at high risk for hypoglycemia

High maternal glucose causes increased fetal insulin production, which continues after birth when glucose supply is cut off

400

When starting insulin, what is the recommended monitoring frequency?

Every 15-30 minutes while titrating, then hourly once stable.

400

Name three situations where glucose gel should NOT be used

Symptomatic hypoglycemia, NPO status, or unable to protect airway

400

Name three ways to prevent hypoglycemia in at-risk infants

Early feeding, skin-to-skin care, appropriate glucose infusion rates

400

Name three non-glucose problems commonly seen in IDM babies?

Macrosomia, respiratory distress, polycythemia, cardiac problems

500

What makes hypoglycemia in IDM babies particularly dangerous for brain function?

High insulin levels prevent alternative fuel use (ketones and lipids) by the brain during hypoglycemia

500

Calculate the glucose infusion rate for a 1 kg baby receiving D10W at 80mL/kg/day

5.5 mg/kg/min

500

Describe the step-by-step process for proper glucose gel administration

Dry mucosa, apply with gloved finger to buccal mucosa, massage in portions, can repeat up to 3 times

500

Explain why point-of-care glucose testing should be confirmed by lab values 

POC testing may underestimate true glucose levels by 10-15%

500

Explain the pathophysiology of hypoglycemia in perinatal stress

Increased glucose utilization due to anaerobic metabolism and depleted glycogen stores