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Critical Care 2008
Insulin-related decrease in cerebral glucose despite normoglycemia in aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhageDOI: 10.1186/cc6776 Abstract: This prospective, nonrandomized study was conducted in 31 SAH patients in an intensive care unit (age 52 ± 10 years, World Federation of Neurological Surgeons grade 2.9 ± 1.6). A microdialysis catheter was inserted into the vascular territory of the aneurysm after clipping. Blood glucose levels above 140 mg/dl were treated with intravenous insulin and the microdialysates were analyzed hourly for the first 12 hours of infusion.No hypoglycaemia occurred. Twenty-four patients were treated with insulin for glucose control. Higher age and World Federation of Neurological Surgeons score were risk factors for need for insulin treatment (P < 0.05). Although blood glucose remained stable after initiation of insulin infusion, insulin induced a significant decrease in cerebral glucose at 3 hours after onset of the infusion until the end of the observation period (P < 0.05), reflecting high glucose utilization. The lactate:pyruvate ratio and glutamate did not increase, excluding ischaemia as possible cause of the decrease in glucose. Glycerol tended toward higher values at the end of the observation period (9 to 12 hours), reflecting either tissue damage after SAH or the beginning of cellular distress after insulin infusion.Higher SAH grade was among the risk factors for need for insulin. Intensive glycaemic control using insulin induced a decrease of cerebral glucose and a slight increase in glycerol, though blood glucose remained normal. Future studies might detect relevant metabolic derangements when insulin treatment starts at low cerebral glucose levels, and may allow us to design a strategy for avoidance of insulin-induced metabolic crisis in SAH patients.Hyperglycaemia on admission and elevated blood glucose levels during the first week after SAH are common and well established as predictors of poor outcome [1,2]. Although preventative glycaemic control with levels not substantially exceeding 110 mg/dl reduced mortality during intensive care by more than 40%, threshold g
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