
The FlightBridgeED Podcast MDCast: DKA in Disguise | What Pregnancy Symptoms Hide
Jan 8, 2026
Dr. Liz Gartner, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist, dives into the critical issue of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) during pregnancy, a condition often masked by typical pregnancy symptoms. She explains how pregnancy's unique physiology predisposes women to DKA at lower glucose levels. The discussion covers common triggers, like infection and insulin nonadherence, and highlights the importance of recognizing the condition early. Gartner shares vital management strategies, emphasizing aggressive maternal resuscitation and that delivery alone isn’t treatment—it's all about saving both mother and baby.
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Glucose Can Be Low During DKA In Pregnancy
- Hemodilution and increased GFR lower serum glucose and A1C in pregnancy.
- Up to 30% of pregnancy DKA cases are euglycemic (glucose ≤250), so normal-looking sugars can be misleading.
Investigate Common Pregnancy Symptoms
- Don't dismiss nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, polyuria, or fatigue in pregnant patients with diabetes.
- Evaluate for DKA when those symptoms are prolonged or atypical, even if they seem like normal pregnancy complaints.
Recognize And Prevent Common Triggers
- Look for common DKA triggers in pregnancy: infection, poor insulin access/adherence, hyperemesis, and corticosteroids.
- Anticipate steroid-induced hyperglycemia and consider insulin drips for brittle type 1 patients before giving betamethasone.
