| Literature DB >> 1874606 |
G Cazzato1, M Zorzon, G Masè, L G Iona.
Abstract
To find out whether the high blood glucose values sometimes found in the first stage of ischemic stroke have any prognostic value, we considered 76 patients hospitalized within 24 h of an acute cerebral infarction, documented by CT brain scan and/or necropsy, whose fasting blood glucose was recorded before any treatment was given. The patients were sorted into 3 groups: diabetics, normoglycemic non-diabetics and hyperglycemic nondiabetics. On the CT findings cases with large cortical and/or subcortical infarcts were analyzed separately from those with lacunar infarcts. The clinical symptoms on admission proved to be more severe (p less than 0.02) and 30-day mortality higher (p less than 0.02) among the hyperglycemic non-diabetics, who also showed a highly significant (p less than 0.00001) preponderance of large cortical and subcortical infarcts over lacunar infarcts. Multivariate analysis, which took account of variables of known relevance to the prognosis of cerebral infarction (age, sex, arterial hypertension, severity of the clinical pattern, type of brain lesion), confirmed the statistically discriminant power, in terms of mortality, of belonging to the hyperglycemic nondiabetic group. The results of the study confirm that hyperglycemia at stroke onset in nondiabetic patients is an adverse prognostic factor and suggest that it may be a reaction to stress, depending on the size of the infarcted area.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1874606 DOI: 10.1007/bf02337775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Neurol Sci ISSN: 0392-0461