Introduction: Metabolic and vascular emergencies constitute a risk of lethality in diabetic subjects admitted to hospital. The objective was to evaluate the factors associated with death in subjects admitted for a diabetological emergency to improve management. Materials and Methods: It was a 12-month retrospective, descriptive and analytical study at Dakar's Marc Sankale Diabetes Center. The study concerned any type of diabetics subjects admitted for a diabetological emergency. We evaluated the profile of diabetes, the pathologies found and factors associated with death. Results: We identified 697 cases of diabetic emergencies with a prevalence of 13.8%. The sex ratio (M/F) was 0.82, the mean age was 49.6 years, and the mean duration of diabetes was 7.1 years. The metabolic profile was hypoglycemia (11.3%), ketoacidosis (34.6%), and hyperosmolar hyperglycemia syndrome (5%). The associated pathologies were vascular (51.1%), infectious (65.3%), kidney function impairment (7.6%), anaemia (13.8%). During the follow-up, 94 patients died, as an annual frequency of 13.5% among diabetological emergencies. In univariate analysis, the factors significantly associated with death were age > 60 years = 6.85 (2.34 -20)]. In addition to diabetes, the deceased patients had one (18%), two (34%) and at least three (45.7%) known factors of poor prognosis. Conclusion: Emergencies in diabetology remain frequent in our practice. The comorbidity (vascular and infectious) constitutes a risk of abnormally high death rate. A particular attention must concern on old diabetics subjects with several pathologies.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.