Department of Medicine, University of Washington Medicine Diabetes Institute, Seattle, WA.
Stamford Hospital, Stamford, CT.
Diabetes Care. 2023 Feb 1;46(2):237-244. doi: 10.2337/dc22-1445.
"Relative hypoglycemia" is an often-overlooked complication of diabetes characterized by an increase in the glycemic threshold for detecting and responding to hypoglycemia. The clinical relevance of this problem is linked to growing evidence that among patients with critical illness, higher blood glucose in the intensive care unit is associated with higher mortality among patients without diabetes but lower mortality in patients with preexisting diabetes and an elevated prehospitalization HbA1c. Although additional studies are needed, the cardiovascular stress associated with hypoglycemia perception, which can occur at normal or even elevated glucose levels in patients with diabetes, offers a plausible explanation for this difference in outcomes. Little is known, however, regarding how hypoglycemia is normally detected by the brain, much less how relative hypoglycemia develops in patients with diabetes. In this article, we explore the role in hypoglycemia detection played by glucose-responsive sensory neurons supplying peripheral vascular beds and/or circumventricular organs. These observations support a model wherein relative hypoglycemia results from diabetes-associated impairment of this neuronal glucose-sensing process. By raising the glycemic threshold for hypoglycemia perception, this impairment may contribute to the increased mortality risk associated with standard glycemic management of critically ill patients with diabetes.
“相对性低血糖”是糖尿病患者常被忽视的并发症之一,其特征是检测和应对低血糖的血糖阈值升高。这个问题的临床意义与越来越多的证据有关,即在患有危重病的患者中,重症监护病房中的更高血糖水平与无糖尿病患者的更高死亡率相关,但与患有预先存在的糖尿病和升高的预住院 HbA1c 的患者的更低死亡率相关。尽管需要进一步的研究,但与低血糖感知相关的心血管应激可以在糖尿病患者的正常甚至升高的血糖水平下发生,这为这种结果差异提供了一个合理的解释。然而,关于大脑如何正常检测低血糖以及糖尿病患者中相对低血糖是如何发展的,我们知之甚少。在本文中,我们探讨了供应外周血管床和/或室周器官的葡萄糖反应性感觉神经元在低血糖检测中的作用。这些观察结果支持这样一种模型,即相对性低血糖是由糖尿病相关的神经元葡萄糖感知过程受损引起的。通过提高低血糖感知的血糖阈值,这种损伤可能导致与患有糖尿病的危重症患者的标准血糖管理相关的更高死亡率风险增加。