EM Pharm Pearls: Estimated rise in blood glucose concentration with dextrose administration

Posted by Bryan D. Hayes, PharmD, DABAT, FAACT, FASHP on

A common question is how much should we expect the blood glucose concentration to increase after dextrose 50% (D50) administration. Fortunately, there is an answer from 3 studies.

  1. Balentine JR, Gaeta TJ, Kessler D, Bagiella E, Lee T. Effect of 50 milliliters of 50% dextrose in water administration on the blood sugar of euglycemic volunteers. Acad Emerg Med. 1998;5(7):691-694. doi:10.1111/j.1553-2712.1998.tb02487.x PMID 9678393
    • Population: Healthy volunteers in the ED
    • Intervention: 25 gm (1 ampule of D50)
    • Result: Mean increase of 162 mg/dL at 5 min. Glucose concentrations returned to baseline by 30 minutes.
  1. Murthy MS, Duby JJ, Parker PL, Durbin-Johnson BP, Roach DM, Louie EL. Blood glucose response to rescue dextrose in hypoglycemic, critically ill patients receiving an insulin infusion. Ann Pharmacother. 2015;49(8):892-896. doi:10.1177/1060028015585574. PMID 25986006
    • Population: Critically ill patients experiencing hypoglycemia while on insulin infusions
    • Intervention: D50
    • Result: Median increase of 4 mg/dL per gm of D50 administered
  1. Adler PM. Serum glucose changes after administration of 50% dextrose solution: pre- and in-hospital calculations. Am J Emerg Med. 1986;4(6):504-506. doi:10.1016/S0735-6757(86)80004-3. PMID 3778594
    • Population: ED patients with altered mental status (23 with diabetes, 28 without diabetes)
    • Intervention: 25 gm (50 mL of D50)
    • Result: Mean increase of 166 mg/dL

Take Home Points

  • Glucose concentrations increase 4-6 mg/dL per gm of dextrose administered
    • 50 mL of D50 = 25 gm = expected 100-150 mg/dL glucose rise
  • D50 rescue glucose is short-lived (30 minutes)
  • If the blood glucose does not respond as anticipated, investigate further (e.g., IV decannulation)


Want to learn more about EM Pharmacology?

Read other articles in the EM Pharm Pearls Series and find previous pearls on the PharmERToxguy site.

Author information

Bryan D. Hayes, PharmD, DABAT, FAACT, FASHP

Leadership Team, ALiEM
Creator and Lead Editor, Capsules and EM Pharm Pearls Series
Attending Pharmacist, EM and Toxicology, MGH
Associate Professor of EM, Division of Medical Toxicology, Harvard Medical School

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