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Apex Nursing

Guide — Endocrine

Hospital Glycemic Management

Inpatient glucose targets, basal-bolus-correctional insulin regimens, insulin drip protocols, NPO management, steroid-induced hyperglycemia, and nursing priorities at the bedside.

10 min read · Endocrine

Educational use only. Insulin protocols, glucose targets, and dosing guidelines vary significantly by institution and patient population. Always follow facility-specific protocols and provider orders. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Why Hospital Patients Develop Hyperglycemia

Hyperglycemia in hospitalized patients is extremely common — affecting diabetic AND non-diabetic patients. Stress hyperglycemia occurs even without a diabetes diagnosis.

CauseMechanismNursing Implication
Physiologic stressSurgery, trauma, infection, illness → catecholamines, glucagon, cortisol release → insulin resistance + gluconeogenesisMonitor glucose even in non-diabetic patients admitted with acute illness
CorticosteroidsGlucocorticoids drive hepatic gluconeogenesis and cause peripheral insulin resistance; effect peaks 4–8h post-doseAnticipate post-dose glucose spike; may need afternoon/evening coverage with AM steroid doses
Enteral/parenteral nutritionTPN glucose load, continuous tube feeding glucose delivery overwhelm endogenous insulin capacityCheck glucose every 6h during TPN; insulin added to TPN bags or given subcutaneously
IV dextrose solutionsD5W, D10W, and other dextrose-containing fluids provide continuous glucose loadConsider glucose in total daily carbohydrate intake; watch for glucose spikes
Reduced physical activityInactivity reduces glucose utilization by skeletal muscleEncourage ambulation when safe; coordinate glucose monitoring with activity level changes

Inpatient Glucose Targets

SettingTarget RangeRationale
ICU / Critical care140–180 mg/dLADA/AACE recommendation; tight control (<110) increases hypoglycemia risk in ICU (NICE-SUGAR trial evidence)
Non-ICU (general ward)< 180 mg/dL (preprandial 80–130 ideal)Balance glucose control benefits with hypoglycemia risk in general patient population
Critically low (any setting)< 70 mg/dLTreat immediately per hypoglycemia protocol; notify provider
Critically high (any setting)> 500 mg/dLAssess for DKA/HHS; notify provider; treat per protocol

Basal-Bolus-Correctional Insulin Regimen

The basal-bolus-correctional (BBC) regimen is the preferred inpatient insulin approach for most non-ICU patients — it mimics physiologic insulin secretion and provides consistent glucose control compared to sliding scale alone.

ComponentPurposeInsulin TypeTiming
BasalControls fasting/overnight glucose; suppresses hepatic glucose production between mealsLong-acting (glargine, detemir, degludec)Once or twice daily at consistent time; do NOT hold if NPO (reduce dose ~20–50% per order)
Bolus (nutritional)Covers glucose from meals/tube feedsRapid-acting (lispro, aspart, glulisine)With each meal — hold if patient not eating; give with meal tray to reduce hypoglycemia risk if meal uncertain
Correctional (sliding scale)Corrects existing hyperglycemia above target; supplemental dose added to bolus when glucose is above rangeRapid-acting; dose based on current glucose and correction scaleWith each glucose check before meals; stand-alone sliding scale is discouraged as sole treatment (reactive, not proactive)

Insulin Drip (Continuous Insulin Infusion)

When used: DKA/HHS, severe hyperglycemia, perioperative glucose management in ICU, patients on TPN with poor glucose control, post-cardiac surgery, organ transplant recipients.

Insulin type: Regular insulin ONLY for IV infusion — rapid-acting analogs (lispro, aspart) are NOT approved for IV infusion in most protocols.

TopicKey Information
Monitoring frequencyEvery 1–2 hours minimum (per protocol); more frequent if glucose is unstable or during rate changes
Rate adjustmentFollow validated insulin drip algorithm (facility protocol); adjustments based on current glucose AND rate of change
Transition to SQ insulinGive first SQ basal dose 2–4 hours BEFORE discontinuing drip — allows SQ insulin to reach therapeutic level before IV discontinued
Hypoglycemia riskHigh alert — have D50W at bedside; decrease drip rate immediately for glucose < 70; hold drip for < 60 mg/dL per protocol
Dextrose co-infusionD5NS or D5W often infused with insulin drip in DKA once glucose falls to 200–250 mg/dL to prevent hypoglycemia while continuing to clear ketones

NPO Patient Management

  • Basal insulin: Generally continue at 75–80% of usual dose when NPO (do not hold entirely — needed to prevent ketosis); exact dose adjustment per order
  • Bolus (meal) insulin: Hold if patient is NPO — no meal = no meal bolus
  • Home oral antidiabetic medications: Most held when NPO; metformin held with contrast procedures; sulfonylureas held NPO (hypoglycemia risk)
  • Point-of-care glucose: Monitor every 4–6 hours when NPO; adjust per sliding scale
  • IV fluids: D5NS may be ordered to prevent hypoglycemia and ketosis in Type 1 patients who are NPO
  • Insulin pump patients: Coordinate with provider and diabetes team — some continue pump during procedures; never assume pump is suspended

Point-of-Care Glucose Monitoring

SituationMonitoring Frequency
Stable non-ICU, eatingBefore meals and at bedtime (AC/HS — 4 times daily)
Stable non-ICU, NPOEvery 4–6 hours
ICU patients on insulin dripEvery 1–2 hours per protocol
Patients receiving TPNEvery 6 hours until stable, then per order
Patient on corticosteroidsBefore meals and at bedtime (anticipate glucose spike 4–8h after AM dose)

Glucose meter accuracy considerations

  • Capillary (fingerstick) glucose: ±15–20% of lab value; use lab plasma glucose when clinically critical
  • Peripheral edema, poor circulation, vasopressors: fingerstick may be inaccurate — use arterial blood gas glucose instead
  • Hematocrit extremes (very high or low) affect POC meter accuracy

NCLEX Pearls

ICU glucose target = 140–180 mg/dL: NOT 80–110 (tight control shown to increase mortality in NICE-SUGAR trial). Avoid overly aggressive targets in ICU.

Sliding scale alone is inadequate: The preferred regimen is basal-bolus-correctional. Sliding scale alone is reactive — it treats hyperglycemia after it occurs rather than preventing it.

Regular insulin ONLY for IV: Only regular insulin (not lispro, aspart, glulisine) is approved for IV infusion in standard protocols.

Transition timing: Give SQ insulin 2–4 hours BEFORE stopping insulin drip — ensures continuous coverage without gap.

Basal insulin when NPO: Do NOT hold entirely — typically reduce by 20–50% as ordered. Holding completely in Type 1 DM patients risks DKA even when fasting.

Steroid-induced hyperglycemia: Peaks 4–8 hours after AM corticosteroid dose — anticipate glucose spike and have coverage orders in place before it occurs.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with American Diabetes Association (ADA) Standards of Care · American Association of Clinical Endocrinology (AACE). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →