| Literature DB >> 31875136 |
Gabriella Eisler1, Jasmin R Kastner1,2, Marc C Torjman1, Abdurizzagh Khalf1, David Diaz1, Alek R Dinesen1, Channy Loeum1, Mathew L Thakur3, Paul Strasma4, Jeffrey I Joseph1.
Abstract
Objective: This study investigated the effects of the inflammatory tissue response (ITR) to an insulin infusion set (IIS) on insulin bolus spread over wear time, as well as the effect of cannula insertion angle on the ITR, bolus shape, and pump tubing pressure. Research design and methods: Angled or straight IISs were inserted every other day for 14 days into the subcutaneous tissue of 11 swine and insulin was delivered continuously. Prior to euthanasia, a 70 µL bolus of insulin/X-ray contrast agent was infused while recording a pressure profile (peak tubing pressure, pmax; area under the pressure curve, AUC), followed by the excision of the tissue-catheter specimen. Bolus surface area (SA) and volume (V) were assessed via micro-CT. Tissue was stained to analyze total area of inflammation (TAI) and inflammatory layer thickness (ILT) surrounding the cannula.Entities:
Keywords: animal model(s); continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion; inflammation; insulin delivery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31875136 PMCID: PMC6904176 DOI: 10.1136/bmjdrc-2019-000881
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care ISSN: 2052-4897
Figure 1Histopathology. (A) Area of inflammation and (B) thickness of inflammatory layer around the cannulas of CSII catheters inserted at 30° and 90° over wear time. Values are shown as mean±SD, n=76 catheters in each group; *p<0.05 vs 30°, ANOVA-GLM. Micro-CT. (C) Bolus surface area and (D) bolus volume over catheter wear time. Values are shown as mean±SD, n=66; *p<0.05 vs 90°, +p<0.05 vs day of insertion, ANOVA-GLM with Bonferroni correction (micro-CT image for day 0, angled CSII catheter not available). (E) Panel of representative images of tissue histology and micro-CT images of catheter-tissue specimens for each day. Contrast agent spread in the tissue is shown in orange, and CSII catheter hub on skin surface in teal. Trichrome stains of representative histology slides show the layer of inflammatory tissue over time around the void (white) left by the cannula after removal. Fibrin and red blood cells are stained red; collagen/connective tissue is stained light or dark blue. Blue and orange scale bars are equivalent to 3 mm. ANOVA-GLM, analysis of variance-generalized linear model; CSII, continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion.
Summary of data averaged over all days
| Surface area (mm2) | P value | Volume (mm3) | P value | SA:V (mm-1) | P value | ||
| Micro-CT | 30° | 314.0+84.2 | <0.0001 | 198.7+66.9 | 0.001 | 1.7±0.4 | 1.0 |
| 90° | 229.0+99.7 | 145.0+65.9 | 1.7±1.5 |
Micro-CT (n=76) and histology (n=66) values are shown as mean±SD. Tubing pressure (n=66) values are shown as median±SD.
AUC, area under the curve; pmax, peak pressure; SA:V, surface area to volume ratio.
Figure 2Pressure analysis. (A) Changes in maximum tubing pressure over wear time. (B) Changes in area under the pressure curve over wear time. Values are shown as mean±SEM.
Figure 3Correlations. (A) Layer of inflammation versus bolus volume. (B) Layer of inflammation versus bolus surface area. (C) Layer of inflammation versus peak tubing pressure. (D) Bolus surface area versus peak tubing pressure. *p<0.05, **p<0.005