| Literature DB >> 23209941 |
Abstract
Hyperglycemia, which occurs in the perioperative period during cardiac surgery, has been shown to be associated with increased morbidity and mortality. The management of perioperative hyperglycemia during coronary artery bypass graft surgery and all cardiac surgical procedures has been the focus of intensive study in recent years. This report will paper the pathophysiology responsible for the detrimental effects of perioperative hyperglycemia during cardiac surgery, show how continuous insulin infusions in the perioperative period have improved outcomes, and discuss the results of trials designed to determine what level of a glycemic control is necessary to achieve optimal clinical outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23209941 PMCID: PMC3504366 DOI: 10.5402/2012/292490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Cardiol ISSN: 2090-5580
Figure 1Continuous insulin infusion protocol.
Pharmacokinetics of insulin preparations.
| Type of insulin | Onset | Peak (hours) | Duration (hours) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rapid analogs (lispro, aspart, glulisine) | 5–15 minutes | 1-2 | 4–6 |
| Short (regular) | 30–60 minutes | 2-3 | 6–10 |
| Intermediate (NPH*) | 2–4 hours | 4–10 | 12–18 |
| Long (glargine) | 2–4 hours | Flat | 20–24 |
| Long (detemir) | 2 hours | Flat | 6–24 |
*NPH: Neutral Protamine Hagedorn.
Figure 2Example transition from continuous insulin infusion to subcutaneous insulin therapy.
Suggested use of the HA1c during hospitalization for discharge planning for hyperglycemic patients.
| Unknown diabetes | Known diabetes | Followup | |
|---|---|---|---|
| HA1c < 6.5%* | Assess diabetes risk factors. Counseling and outpatient screening within 3 months | ||
| HA1c 6.5–7%* and insulin requirement < 0.4 units/kg/day | Counseling and outpatient screening within 3 months ± pharmacologic prevention** | Assess for hypoglycemia risk. | Communicate recommendation to outpatient providers. |
| HA1c 6.5–7%* and insulin requirement ≥ 0.4 units/kg/day | Counseling and | ||
| HA1c > 7%* | Counseling and initiation of appropriate diabetes treatment plan | Consider transient effect of subacute illness (e.g., angina) prior to hospitalization on HA1c. Consider advising augmentation of outpatient regimen to target <7% |
Adapted from Supplement to ACP Hospitalist. December 15, 2009. *Note, the A1c is inaccurate after blood transfusion and in severe anemia, or in high or low red blood cell turnover states. **Metformin or acarbose.