| Literature DB >> 22400022 |
Daniel Agustín Godoy1, Mario Di Napoli, Alberto Biestro, Rainer Lenhardt.
Abstract
Many neurosurgery patients may have unrecognized diabetes or may develop stress-related hyperglycemia in the perioperative period. Diabetes patients have a higher perioperative risk of complications and have longer hospital stays than individuals without diabetes. Maintenance of euglycemia using intensive insulin therapy (IIT) continues to be investigated as a therapeutic tool to decrease morbidity and mortality associated with derangements in glucose metabolism due to surgery. Suboptimal perioperative glucose control may contribute to increased morbidity, mortality, and aggravate concomitant illnesses. The challenge is to minimize the effects of metabolic derangements on surgical outcomes, reduce blood glucose excursions, and prevent hypoglycemia. Differences in cerebral versus systemic glucose metabolism, time course of cerebral response to injury, and heterogeneity of pathophysiology in the neurosurgical patient populations are important to consider in evaluating the risks and benefits of IIT. While extremes of glucose levels are to be avoided, there are little data to support an optimal blood glucose level or recommend a specific use of IIT for euglycemia maintenance in the perioperative management of neurosurgical patients. Individualized treatment should be based on the local level of blood glucose control, outpatient treatment regimen, presence of complications, nature of the surgical procedure, and type of anesthesia administered.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22400022 PMCID: PMC3286889 DOI: 10.1155/2012/690362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anesthesiol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6962
Figure 1Causes and consequences of hyperglycemia. Where SIRS: Systemic inflammatory response syndrome.
Hypoglycemia causes in neurocritical care patients.
| (i) Starvation |
| Prolonged hospitalization |
| Pregnancy |
| (ii) Drug Induced |
| Insulin (intensive insulin therapy) |
| Hypoglycemic agents |
| Alcohol |
| Etomidate |
| Beta blockers |
| Cyprofloxacin |
| Salicylates |
| Enalapril |
| Warfarin |
| Acetaminophen |
| (iii) Sepsis |
| (iv) Renal dysfunction |
| (v) Hepatic dysfunction |
| (vi) Endocrine |
| Hypopituitarism |
| Adrenal insufficiency |
| Hypothyroidism |
| Hyperinsulinemia: parenteral nutrition |
| (vii) Idiopathic |
| (viii) Iatrogenic |
Preoperative evaluation of the neurosurgical patient.
|
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| antidiabetic agents. In elective surgeries, hold oral antidiabetic |
| agents 24 hours before intervention especially those such as |
| chlorpropamide with a long half-life. |
|
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| procedures (<2 hours), suspend regular insulin. Administer |
| only 2/3 of the long-acting insulin (NPH) or give the full dose of |
| basal insulin (glargine, levemir), and start nutrition 12 hours after |
| surgery. |
|
|
| only use regular insulin according to unit's protocol. |
Reactive regimen (according to monitorized values). The measurement unit used for indicating the concentration of blood or plasma glucose can either have a weight dimension (mg/dL) or a molarity (mmol/L).
| Glucose value | Insulin dose | |
|---|---|---|
| mmol/L* | mg/dL† | IU |
| ≤8.3 | ≤150 | — |
| 8.4–11.1 | 151–200 | 5 |
| 11.2–13.9 | 201–250 | 10 |
| 13.93–16.7 | 251–300 | 15 |
| 16.71–19.4 | 301–350 | 20 |
Exact conversion of glucose values from mg/dL to mmol/L and vice versa are as follows:
*mmol/l = mg/dL × 0.0555,
†mg/dL = mmol/L × 18.0182
Proactive regimen: dilute 100 U of insulin in 100 mL of isotonic saline solution 0.9% (1 U = 1 mL). Administer via infusion pump according to the following scheme. The measurement unit used for indicating the concentration of blood or plasma glucose can either have a weight dimension (mg/dL) or a molarity (mmol/L).
| Glucose value | Insulin infusion rate | |
|---|---|---|
| mmol/L | mg/dL | IU/h |
| 8.3–9.4 | 150–169 | 2 |
| 9.43–11.0 | 170–199 | 3 |
| 11.1–13.8 | 200–249 | 4 |
| 13.9–16.6 | 250–299 | 6 |
| 16.7–22.1 | 300–399 | 8 |
| 22.2+ | 400+ | 10 |
Exact conversion of glucose values from mg/dL to mmol/L and vice versa are as follows:
*mmol/L = mg/dL × 0.0555,
†mg/dL = mmol/L × 18.0182.
Hypoglycemia management.
| Administer hypertonic dextrose (50%) according to the following |
| formula: |
| (100 − glycemia) × 0.3 = mL in IV bolus |
| Check plasma glucose every 30 minutes |
| If glucose < 60 mg/dL (3.3 mmol/L), repeat the IV bolus step |
Overcorrection will be avoided in all cases.
Capillary glucose monitoring with test strips: factors interfering with correct determination.
| (i) Factors overestimating the accurate value (false rise) |
| Anemia |
| Paracetamol |
| Dopamine |
| Mannitol |
| Hyperuricemia |
| Vitamin C |
| Jaundice |
| Immunoglobulins |
| (ii) Factors underestimating the accurate value (false drop) |
| High hematocrit (polycythemia—COPD) |
| Hypoperfusion |
| Noradrenaline (high doses) |
| Edema |
| Hypoglycemia |
| paO2 > 100 mmHg |
Recommendations for adequate nutritional support during glucose control protocol.
| (i) Avoid excessive caloric intake especially carbohydrates |
| (ii) No more than 25–30 calories per kg body weight per day |
| (iii) 25% of intake in the form of lipids |
| (iv) Insulin therapy according to needs |
Figure 2Suggested glycemic targets during acute brain injury/neurosurgery. Where L/P: Lactate/Pyruvate and BBB: Blood–brain barrier.
Figure 3Algorithm proposed for hyperglycemic management.