| Literature DB >> 26078998 |
Sivakumar Sudhakaran1, Salim R Surani2.
Abstract
Management of glycemic levels in the perioperative setting is critical, especially in diabetic patients. The effects of surgical stress and anesthesia have unique effects on blood glucose levels, which should be taken into consideration to maintain optimum glycemic control. Each stage of surgery presents unique challenges in keeping glucose levels within target range. Additionally, there are special operative conditions that require distinctive glucose management protocols. Interestingly, the literature still does not report a consensus perioperative glucose management strategy for diabetic patients. We hope to outline the most important factors required in formulating a perioperative diabetic regimen, while still allowing for specific adjustments using prudent clinical judgment. Overall, through careful glycemic management in perioperative patients, we may reduce morbidity and mortality and improve surgical outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26078998 PMCID: PMC4452499 DOI: 10.1155/2015/284063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Res Pract ISSN: 2356-6124
Broad management goals across the perioperative timeline. Overall goals: (i) reduce patient morbidity and mortality, (ii) avoid clinically significant hyper- or hypoglycemia, (iii) maintain acid/base, electrolyte, and fluid balance, (iv) prevent ketoacidosis, and (v) establish blood glucose measurements less than 180 mg/dL in critical patients and less than 140 mg/dL in stable patients.
| Preoperative management key points | Intraoperative management key points | Postoperative management key points |
|---|---|---|
| (i) Verify target blood glucose concentration with frequent glucose monitoring | (i) Aim to maintain intraoperative glucose levels between 140 and 170 mg/dL | (i) Target postoperative glycemic range between 140 and 180 mg/dL |
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