| Literature DB >> 33550443 |
Abstract
Hypoglycaemia (blood glucose concentration below the normal range) has been recognised as a complication of insulin treatment from the very first days of the discovery of insulin, and remains a major concern for people with diabetes, their families and healthcare professionals today. Acute hypoglycaemia stimulates a stress response that acts to restore circulating glucose, but plasma glucose concentrations can still fall too low to sustain normal brain function and cardiac rhythm. There are long-term consequences of recurrent hypoglycaemia, which are still not fully understood. This paper reviews our current understanding of the acute and cumulative consequences of hypoglycaemia in insulin-treated diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes mellitus; Hypoglycaemia; Review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33550443 PMCID: PMC8012317 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-020-05366-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Levels of hypoglycaemia that should be reported in clinical trials, and which have clinical implications for people with diabetes
| Level | Name | Plasma glucose | Implications |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hypoglycaemia alert | <3.9 mmol/la | Lower limit of ‘glucose in range’ Usually asymptomatic Treat to prevent hypoglycaemia Consider regimen change if recurrent |
| 2 | Clinically important | <3 mmol/l | Associated with impaired cognitive function Repeated episodes cause reduced awareness Predicts severe hypoglycaemia Associated with cardiac arrhythmias Predicts mortality |
| 3 | Severe | Not specified | Cognitive decline results in the need for treatment by another person May be further divided to specify episodes requiring parenteral therapy and/or episodes associated with loss of consciousness or seizure |
Data from The International Hypoglycaemia Study Group [2]
aIn the original document, the International Hypoglycemia Study Group (IHSG) had defined level 1 as glucose ≤3.9 mmol/l [2] but this was refined by a subsequent consensus to make a clear distinction between this classification and the lower limit of the desirable glucose range, which is 3.9 mmol/l [3]
Fig. 1A graphical summary of the potential consequences of hypoglycaemia. Elements of the stress response to a hypoglycaemic episode are shown in orange text boxes; other colours indicate different classes of possible consequences of hypoglycaemic episodes and of hypoglycaemia itself (blue, neurological/cognitive; purple, psychological; yellow, socioeconomic; brown, mortality; green, cardiovascular). This figure is available as a downloadable slide