Outside of overt shock or a peri-arrest situation with presumed life threatening hyperkalemia, I don't think there's a role for bicarb for DKA in prehospital setting. Even in the ICU we don't consider it unless pH is <6.9 or we have cardiac instability/shock or hyperkalemia, and even then it's in a solution given over an hour or two.
The Airway issue here is fairly straightforward, use the same general indications for intubation you'd use for other conditions. I'd say that if his mental status has declined to the point of needing BVM then he probably needs to be tubed. Otherwise if he's oxygenating and still awake enough to protect his airway and breath on his own his resp rate will get better with treatment.
Babysat a young DKAer the other night in the ICU who came in breathing 30's, tachy 130's, BP ok, pH 7.05. Everything improved in matter of hours with fluids, lytes, and insulin.
The Airway issue here is fairly straightforward, use the same general indications for intubation you'd use for other conditions. I'd say that if his mental status has declined to the point of needing BVM then he probably needs to be tubed. Otherwise if he's oxygenating and still awake enough to protect his airway and breath on his own his resp rate will get better with treatment.
Babysat a young DKAer the other night in the ICU who came in breathing 30's, tachy 130's, BP ok, pH 7.05. Everything improved in matter of hours with fluids, lytes, and insulin.