학술논문

Influence of Glycemic Control on Endogenous Circulating Ketone Concentrations in Adults Following Traumatic Brain Injury.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Neurocritical Care. Apr2017, Vol. 26 Issue 2, p239-246. 8p.
Subject
*BRAIN injury treatment
*COMPLICATIONS of brain injuries
*HYPERGLYCEMIA treatment
*KETONES
*GLYCEMIC control
*BLOOD sugar analysis
*COMPARATIVE studies
*CROSSOVER trials
*HYPERGLYCEMIA
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*HEALTH outcome assessment
*RESEARCH
*RESEARCH funding
*EVALUATION research
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
DISEASES in adults
Language
ISSN
1541-6933
Abstract
Background: The objective was to investigate the impact of targeting tight glycemic control (4.4-6.1 mM) on endogenous ketogenesis in severely head-injured adults.Methods: The data were prospectively collected during a randomized, within-patient crossover study comparing tight to loose glycemic control, defined as 6.7-8.3 mM. Blood was collected periodically during both tight and loose glycemic control epochs. Post hoc analysis of insulin dose and total nutritional provision was performed.Results: Fifteen patients completed the crossover study. Total ketones were increased 81 μM ([38 135], p < 0.001) when blood glucose was targeted to tight (4.4-6.1 mM) compared with loose glycemic control (6.7-8.3 mM), corresponding to a 60 % increase. There was a significant decrease in total nutritional provisions (p = 0.006) and a significant increase in insulin dose (p = 0.008).Conclusions: Permissive underfeeding was tolerated when targeting tight glycemic control, but total nutritional support is an important factor when treating hyperglycemia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]