| Literature DB >> 34055942 |
Mingmin Li1, Guo Chen1, Yingqing Feng1, Xuyu He1.
Abstract
Elevation of glucose level in response to acute coronary syndrome (ACS) has been recognized as stress induced hyperglycemia (SIH). Plenty of clinical studies have documented that SIH occurs very common in patients hospitalized with ACS, even in those without previously known diabetes mellitus. The association between elevated blood glucose levels with adverse outcome in the ACS setting is well-established. Yet, the precise definition of SIH in the context of ACS remains controversial, bringing confusions about clinical management strategy. Several randomized trials aimed to evaluate the effect of insulin-based therapy on outcomes of ACS patients failed to demonstrate a consistent benefit of intensive glucose control. Mechanisms underlying detrimental effects of SIH on patients with ACS are undetermined, oxidative stress might play an important role in the upstream pathways leading to subsequent harmful effects on cardiovascular system. This review aims to discuss various definitions of SIH and their values in predicting adverse outcome in the context of ACS, as well as the effect of intensive glucose control on clinical outcome. Finally, a glimpse of the underlying mechanisms is briefly discussed.Entities:
Keywords: acute coronary syndrome; admission blood glucose; intensive glucose control; oxidative stress; stress induced hyperglycemia
Year: 2021 PMID: 34055942 PMCID: PMC8149624 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.676892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Randomized trials designed to compare effect of intensive glycemic control with that of standard therapy in patients presenting with ACS and associated SIH.
| DIGAMI | AMI | 620 | >198 mg/dL | 126–180 mg/dL in acute phase | 148 | Mortality at 3 months | NS |
| DIGAMI 2 | ACS | 1,253 | >198 mg/dL | Group 1: 90–126 mg/dL(fasting), <180 mg/dL (non-fasting) | 163.8 | All-cause mortality difference between group 1 and 2 | NS |
| A1c ~6.8 | |||||||
| HI-5 | AMI | 240 | ≥140 mg/dL | <140 mg/dL | 149.4 | Mortality at in-hospital stage, 3 and 6 months | NS |
| A1C 6.9 | |||||||
| A1C 7.4 | |||||||
| Marfella | AMI | 50 | ≥140 mg/dL | 80–140 mg/dL for intervention arm | 162.7 | LVEF, oxidative stress, apoptosis | ↑LVEF |
| Marfella | AMI | 50 (62%) | >140 mg/dL | 80–140 mg/dL for intervention arm | 160.9 | Myocardial regeneration | ↑Myocardial regeneration |
| 180–200 mg/dL for control arm | |||||||
| Marfella | STEMI | 165 (53%) | ≥140 mg/dL | 80–140 mg/dL for intervention arm | 145 | ISR | ↓ISR |
| 180–200 mg/dL for control arm | |||||||
| Marfella | STEMI | 106 | ≥140 mg/dL | 80–140 mg/dL for intervention arm | 144 | Myocardial salvage | ↑Myocardial salvage |
| 180–200 mg/dL for control arm | |||||||
| RECREATE | STEMI | 287 | ≥144 mg/dL | 90–117 mg/dL | 117.5 | Difference in mean glucose levels at 24 h | ↓Glycemia |
| BIOMArKS2 | ACS | 280 | 140–288 mg/dL | 85–110 mg/dL | 112 | hsTropT 72 h after admission | NS |
AMI, acute myocardial infarction; ACS, acute coronary syndrome; STEMI, ST-elevation myocardial infarction; NA, not available; NS, not significant.
p < 0.05;
p < 0.001; CABG, coronary artery bypass sugery; pPCI, primary percutaneous coronary intervention; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; ISR, in-stent restenosis; hsTropT, high-sensitive troponin T-value.
Figure 1Postulated mechanisms underlying detrimental effects of SIH.