Department of Critical Care Medicine, Safar Center for Resuscitation Research, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2012 Jan;13(1):85-91. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0b013e3182192c30.
To determine the relationship between hyperglycemia and outcome in infants and children after severe traumatic brain injury.
Retrospective review of a prospectively collected Pediatric Neurotrauma Registry.
Children admitted after severe traumatic brain injury (postresuscitation Glasgow Coma Scale ≤ 8) were studied (1999-2004). A subset of children (n = 28) were concurrently enrolled in a randomized, controlled clinical trial of early hypothermia for neuroprotection.
Demographic data, serum glucose concentrations, and outcome assessments were collected.
Children (n = 57) were treated with a standard traumatic brain injury protocol. Exogenous glucose was withheld for 48 hrs after injury unless hypoglycemia was observed (blood glucose <70 mg/dL). Early (first 48 hrs) and Late (49-168 hrs) time periods were defined and mean blood glucose concentrations were calculated. Additionally, children were categorized based on peak blood glucose concentrations during each time period (normal, blood glucose <150 mg/dL; mild hyperglycemia, blood glucose ≤ 200 mg/dL; severe hyperglycemia, blood glucose >200 mg/dL). In the Late period, an association between elevated mean serum glucose concentration and outcome was observed (133.5 ± 5.6 mg/dL in the unfavorable group vs. 115.4 ± 4.1 mg/dL in favorable group, p = .02). This association continued to be significant after correcting for injury severity, age, and exposure to insulin (p = .03). Similarly, in the Late period, children within the severe hyperglycemia group had decreased incidence of good outcome compared to children within the other glycemic groups (% good outcome: normal, 61.9%; mild hyperglycemia, 73.7%; severe hyperglycemia, 33.3%; p = .05). However, when adjusted for exposure to insulin, this relationship was no longer statistically significant.
In children with severe traumatic brain injury, hyperglycemia beyond the initial 48 hrs is associated with poor outcome. This relationship was observed in both our analysis of mean blood glucose concentrations as well as among the patients with episodic severe hyperglycemia. This observation suggests a relationship between hyperglycemia and outcome from traumatic brain injury. However, only a prospective study can answer the important question of whether manipulating serum glucose concentration can improve outcome after traumatic brain injury in children.
确定严重创伤性脑损伤后婴儿和儿童的高血糖与结局之间的关系。
前瞻性收集的儿科神经创伤登记处的回顾性研究。
研究了严重创伤性脑损伤后入院的儿童(复苏后格拉斯哥昏迷量表≤8)(1999-2004 年)。一小部分儿童(n=28)同时参加了早期低温神经保护的随机对照临床试验。
收集人口统计学数据、血清葡萄糖浓度和结局评估。
儿童(n=57)接受标准创伤性脑损伤方案治疗。除非出现低血糖(血糖<70mg/dL),否则伤后 48 小时内不给予外源性葡萄糖。定义了早期(前 48 小时)和晚期(49-168 小时)时间段,并计算了平均血糖浓度。此外,根据每个时间段的血糖峰值将儿童分为以下几类(正常,血糖<150mg/dL;轻度高血糖,血糖≤200mg/dL;重度高血糖,血糖>200mg/dL)。在晚期,观察到升高的平均血清葡萄糖浓度与结局之间存在关联(不良组为 133.5±5.6mg/dL,良好组为 115.4±4.1mg/dL,p=0.02)。在校正损伤严重程度、年龄和胰岛素暴露后,这种关联仍然具有统计学意义(p=0.03)。同样,在晚期,重度高血糖组的儿童与其他血糖组相比,良好结局的发生率降低(良好结局:正常组为 61.9%,轻度高血糖组为 73.7%,重度高血糖组为 33.3%,p=0.05)。然而,在校正胰岛素暴露后,这种关系不再具有统计学意义。
在严重创伤性脑损伤的儿童中,初始 48 小时后出现高血糖与不良结局相关。我们的分析中观察到了平均血糖浓度的关系,以及间歇性重度高血糖患者中也观察到了这种关系。这一观察结果表明,高血糖与创伤性脑损伤的结局之间存在关系。然而,只有前瞻性研究才能回答一个重要问题,即是否可以通过控制血清葡萄糖浓度来改善儿童创伤性脑损伤后的结局。