🔥 Free CCRN prep — 695+ questions & AI tutor → Start Free
5% of CCRN Exam

Endocrine System Study Guide

DKA vs HHS, adrenal crisis, thyroid storm, myxedema coma, and SIADH vs DI. These rapid-onset emergencies appear repeatedly on the CCRN.

Contents

  1. Diabetes Mellitus
  2. DKA & HHS
  3. Adrenal Disorders
  4. Thyroid Disorders
  5. Hypo vs Hyperthyroidism Comparison
  6. SIADH & Diabetes Insipidus

Diabetes Mellitus

Types of Diabetes

Diagnostic Criteria

Insulin Management

Hypoglycemia

DKA & HHS

DKA Overview

HHS Overview

DKA vs HHS Comparison Table

Clinical Presentation Differences

Fluid Loss Comparison

Treatment Principles

Adrenal Disorders

Adrenal Gland Hormones

Adrenal Insufficiency (Addison's)

Adrenal Crisis

Test your endocrine knowledge so farTake 10 CCRN-style questions on what you just read — with full rationales.
Practice Now →

Thyroid Disorders

Thyroid Hormone Physiology

Hyperthyroidism

Thyroid Storm

Hypothyroidism

Myxedema Coma

Hypo vs Hyperthyroidism Comparison

Laboratory Findings

Cardiovascular Signs

Metabolic & Thermoregulation

Neurological & Psychiatric

Physical Exam Findings

Life-Threatening Complications

Treatment Approaches

SIADH & Diabetes Insipidus

SIADH (Syndrome of Inappropriate ADH)

Diabetes Insipidus (DI)

DI Treatment

SIADH vs DI Comparison Table

Clinical Pearl: Quick Differentiation

See a Endocrine question you can’t answer?

Here are 3 questions from our premium bank. The full rationale explains exactly why the right answer is right — and why the 3 distractors trap most test-takers.

Premium Practice Question

A 19-year-old with type 1 DM arrives with abdominal pain and Kussmaul respirations. Labs: glucose 610 mg/dL, pH 7.08, HCO₃ 10, anion gap 28, serum K 3.0, lactate 2.2. BP 92/54, HR 128. Which provider order should the nurse prioritize first?

  1. Start insulin infusion now
  2. Give IV potassium replacement and begin isotonic fluids
  3. Give sodium bicarbonate bolus
  4. Start D5½NS immediately
Rationale: In DKA, insulin will shift K into cells—if K <3.3, you must replace K first (and start fluids) before insulin to prevent lethal arrhythmias. Bicarb is not first-line and D5 fluids are used later when ...
Unlock full rationale + 692 more questions
Premium Practice Question

A 76-year-old with type 2 DM is brought in for progressive confusion and lethargy over 3 days. VS: HR 118, BP 86/48, dry mucous membranes. Labs: glucose 1180, pH 7.36, HCO₃ 24, anion gap 10, ketones negative, serum osmolality 338. Which diagnosis best fits?

  1. DKA
  2. HHS
  3. Mixed DKA-HHS
  4. SIADH
Rationale: HHS = very high glucose, hyperosmolarity (>320), minimal/absent ketones, and near-normal pH. Neuro symptoms are prominent due to hyperosmolar state....
Unlock full rationale + 692 more questions
Premium Practice Question

A 58-year-old with type 2 DM presents with tachypnea and confusion. Labs: glucose 960, pH 7.22, HCO₃ 16, anion gap 22, ketones positive, serum osmolality 326, K 4.8. BP 90/50. What is the best initial management priority?

  1. Insulin bolus first, then fluids
  2. Aggressive isotonic fluid resuscitation, then insulin infusion
  3. Hypertonic saline for hyperosmolarity
  4. Fluid restriction due to dilutional hyponatremia
Rationale: This is mixed DKA-HHS (gap acidosis + hyperosmolarity). In both conditions, fluids are first priority to restore perfusion/volume; insulin follows after resuscitation is underway....
Unlock full rationale + 692 more questions

Practice Endocrine Questions

Test your endocrine knowledge with CCRN-style practice questions and detailed rationales.

Take Endocrine Quiz →