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Outcome benefit of intensive insulin therapy in the critically ill: Insulin dose versus glycemic control*

 

作者: Greet Van den Berghe,   Pieter Wouters,   Roger Bouillon,   Frank Weekers,   Charles Verwaest,   Miet Schetz,   Dirk Vlasselaers,   Patrick Ferdinande,   Peter Lauwers,  

 

期刊: Critical Care Medicine  (OVID Available online 2003)
卷期: Volume 31, issue 2  

页码: 359-366

 

ISSN:0090-3493

 

年代: 2003

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: critical illness;intensive care;critical care;glucose;insulin;algorithm;sepsis;polyneuropathy;acute renal failure;infammation

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

ObjectivesMaintenance of normoglycemia with insulin reduces mortality and morbidity of critically ill patients. Here we report the factors determining insulin requirements and the impact of insulin dose vs. blood glucose control on the observed outcome benefits.DesignA prospective, randomized, controlled trial.SettingA 56-bed predominantly surgical intensive care unit in a tertiary teaching hospitalPatients and InterventionA total of 1,548 patients were randomly assigned to either strict normalization of blood glucose (80–110 mg/dL) with insulin infusion or the conventional approach, in which insulin is only given to maintain blood glucose levels at 180–200 mg/dL.Measurements and Main ResultsIt was feasible and safe to achieve and maintain blood glucose levels at <110 mg/dL by using a titration algorithm. Stepwise linear regression analysis identified body mass index, history of diabetes, reason for intensive care unit admission, at-admission hyperglycemia, caloric intake, and time in intensive care unit as independent determinants of insulin requirements, together explaining 36% of its variation. With nutritional intake increasing from a mean of 550 to 1600 calories/day during the first 7 days of intensive care, normoglycemia was reached within 24 hrs, with a mean daily insulin dose of 77 IU and maintained with 94 IU on day 7. Insulin requirements were highest and most variable during the first 6 hrs of intensive care (mean, 7 IU/hr; 10% of patients required >20 IU/hr). Between day 7 and 12, insulin requirements decreased by 40% on stable caloric intake. Brief, clinically harmless hypoglycemia occurred in 5.2% of intensive insulin-treated patients on median day 6 (2–14) vs. 0.8% of conventionally treated patients on day 11 (2–10). The outcome benefits of intensive insulin therapy were equally present regardless of whether patients received enteral feeding. Multivariate logistic regression analysis indicated that the lowered blood glucose level rather than the insulin dose was related to reduced mortality (p< .0001), critical illness polyneuropathy (p< .0001), bacteremia (p= .02), and inflammation (p= .0006) but not to prevention of acute renal failure, for which the insulin dose was an independent determinant (p= .03). As compared with normoglycemia, an intermediate blood glucose level (110–150 mg/dL) was associated with worse outcome.ConclusionNormoglycemia was safely reached within 24 hrs and maintained during intensive care by using insulin titration guidelines. Metabolic control, as reflected by normoglycemia, rather than the infused insulin doseper se, was related to the beneficial effects of intensive insulin therapy.

 

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