Wong X W, Singh-Levett I, Hollingsworth L J, Shaw G M, Hann C E, Lotz T, Lin J, Wong O S W, Chase J G
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Canterbury, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Diabetes Technol Ther. 2006 Apr;8(2):174-90. doi: 10.1089/dia.2006.8.174.
Critically ill patients are often hyperglycemic and insulin resistant, as well as highly dynamic. Tight glucose control has been shown to significantly reduce mortality in critical care. A physiological model of the glucose-insulin regulatory system is improved and used to develop an adaptive control protocol utilizing both nutritional and insulin inputs to control hyperglycemia. The approach is clinically verified in a critical care patient cohort.
A simple two-compartment model for glucose rate of appearance in plasma due to stepwise enteral glucose fluxes is developed and incorporated into a previously validated system model. A control protocol modulating intravenous insulin infusion and bolus, with an enteral feed rate, is developed, enabling tight and predictive glycemic regulation to preset targets. The control protocol is adaptive to patient time-variant effective insulin resistance. The model and protocol are verified in seven 10-h and one 24-h proof-of-concept clinical trials. Ethics approval was granted by the Canterbury Ethics Committee.
Insulin requirements varied widely following acute changes in patient physiology. The algorithm developed successfully adapted to patient metabolic status and insulin sensitivity, achieving an average target acquisition error of 9.3% with 90.7% of all targets achieved within +/-20%. Prediction errors may not be distinguishable from sensor measurement errors. Large errors (>20%) are attributable to highly dynamic and unpredictable changes in patient condition.
Tight, targeted stepwise regulation was exhibited in all trials. Overall, tight glycemic regulation is achieved in a broad critical care cohort with optimized insulin and nutrition delivery, effectively managing glycemia even with high effective insulin resistance.
危重症患者常出现高血糖、胰岛素抵抗,且生理状态高度动态变化。严格的血糖控制已被证明可显著降低重症监护中的死亡率。改进了葡萄糖 - 胰岛素调节系统的生理模型,并用于开发一种利用营养和胰岛素输入来控制高血糖的自适应控制方案。该方法在一组重症监护患者中得到了临床验证。
开发了一个简单的双室模型,用于描述由于逐步肠内葡萄糖通量导致的血浆中葡萄糖出现率,并将其纳入先前验证过的系统模型。制定了一种控制方案,可调节静脉胰岛素输注和推注以及肠内喂养速率,从而实现对预设目标的严格且可预测的血糖调节。该控制方案可适应患者随时间变化的有效胰岛素抵抗。在七项为期10小时的和一项为期24小时的概念验证临床试验中对该模型和方案进行了验证。获得了坎特伯雷伦理委员会的伦理批准。
患者生理状态急性变化后,胰岛素需求差异很大。所开发的算法成功适应了患者的代谢状态和胰岛素敏感性,平均目标获取误差为9.3%,所有目标中有90.7%在±20%范围内实现。预测误差可能与传感器测量误差无法区分。较大误差(>20%)归因于患者病情的高度动态和不可预测的变化。
在所有试验中均表现出严格的、有针对性的逐步调节。总体而言,通过优化胰岛素和营养输送,在广泛的重症监护人群中实现了严格的血糖调节,即使在有效胰岛素抵抗较高的情况下也能有效控制血糖。