Department of Mechanical Eng, Centre for Bio-Engineering, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, 8054, New Zealand.
Ann Intensive Care. 2012 Jun 15;2(1):17. doi: 10.1186/2110-5820-2-17.
Effective tight glycemic control (TGC) can improve outcomes in critical care patients, but it is difficult to achieve consistently. Insulin sensitivity defines the metabolic balance between insulin concentration and insulin-mediated glucose disposal. Hence, variability of insulin sensitivity can cause variable glycemia. This study quantifies and compares the daily evolution of insulin sensitivity level and variability for critical care patients receiving TGC.
This is a retrospective analysis of data from the SPRINT TGC study involving patients admitted to a mixed medical-surgical ICU between August 2005 and May 2007. Only patients who commenced TGC within 12 hours of ICU admission and spent at least 24 hours on the SPRINT protocol were included (N = 164). Model-based insulin sensitivity (SI) was identified each hour. Absolute level and hour-to-hour percent changes in SI were assessed on cohort and per-patient bases. Levels and variability of SI were compared over time on 24-hour and 6-hour timescales for the first 4 days of ICU stay.
Cohort and per-patient median SI levels increased by 34% and 33% (p < 0.001) between days 1 and 2 of ICU stay. Concomitantly, cohort and per-patient SI variability decreased by 32% and 36% (p < 0.001). For 72% of the cohort, median SI on day 2 was higher than on day 1. The day 1-2 results are the only clear, statistically significant trends across both analyses. Analysis of the first 24 hours using 6-hour blocks of SI data showed that most of the improvement in insulin sensitivity level and variability seen between days 1 and 2 occurred during the first 12-18 hours of day 1.
Critically ill patients have significantly lower and more variable insulin sensitivity on day 1 than later in their ICU stay and particularly during the first 12 hours. This rapid improvement is likely due to the decline of counter-regulatory hormones as the acute phase of critical illness progresses. Clinically, these results suggest that while using TGC protocols with patients during their first few days of ICU stay, extra care should be afforded. Increased measurement frequency, higher target glycemic bands, conservative insulin dosing, and modulation of carbohydrate nutrition should be considered to minimize safely the outcome glycemic variability and reduce the risk of hypoglycemia.
有效的严格血糖控制(TGC)可以改善重症监护患者的预后,但很难始终如一地实现。胰岛素敏感性定义了胰岛素浓度和胰岛素介导的葡萄糖清除之间的代谢平衡。因此,胰岛素敏感性的可变性会导致血糖的可变性。本研究量化并比较了接受 TGC 的重症监护患者胰岛素敏感性水平和变异性的日常变化。
这是对 2005 年 8 月至 2007 年 5 月期间入住混合内科-外科 ICU 的患者的 SPRINT TGC 研究数据的回顾性分析。仅纳入在 ICU 入院后 12 小时内开始 TGC 并至少在 SPRINT 方案上度过 24 小时的患者(N=164)。每小时识别基于模型的胰岛素敏感性(SI)。在队列和每位患者的基础上评估 SI 的绝对水平和小时变化百分比。在 ICU 入住的前 4 天内,在 24 小时和 6 小时的时间尺度上比较 SI 的水平和变异性。
队列和每位患者的中位 SI 水平在 ICU 入住的第 1 天至第 2 天之间分别增加了 34%和 33%(p<0.001)。同时,队列和每位患者的 SI 变异性分别降低了 32%和 36%(p<0.001)。对于 72%的队列,第 2 天的中位数 SI 高于第 1 天。第 1 天至第 2 天的结果是两种分析中唯一明确的、具有统计学意义的趋势。使用 SI 数据的 6 小时块对前 24 小时进行分析表明,在第 1 天和第 2 天之间观察到的胰岛素敏感性水平和变异性的大部分改善发生在第 1 天的前 12-18 小时内。
与 ICU 入住后期相比,重症患者在入住第 1 天的胰岛素敏感性显著降低且更具可变性,尤其是在第 1 天的前 12 小时内。这种快速改善可能是由于随着危重病急性期的进展,拮抗激素的下降所致。临床上,这些结果表明,在 ICU 入住的最初几天使用 TGC 方案时,应格外注意。应增加测量频率、提高目标血糖范围、保守胰岛素给药以及调节碳水化合物营养,以最大限度地降低安全性血糖变异性并降低低血糖风险。