Stanley Charles A, Thornton Paul S, De Leon Diva D
Congenital Hyperinsulinism Center and Division of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Pediatr. 2023 Mar 10;11:1071206. doi: 10.3389/fped.2023.1071206. eCollection 2023.
For the past 70 years, controversy about hypoglycemia in newborn infants has focused on a numerical "definition of neonatal hypoglycemia", without regard to its mechanism. This ignores the purpose of screening newborns for hypoglycemia, which is to identify those with pathological forms of hypoglycemia and to prevent hypoglycemic brain injury. Recent clinical and basic research indicates that the three major forms of neonatal hypoglycemia are caused by hyperinsulinism (recognizing also that other rare hormonal or metabolic conditions may also present during this time frame). These include transitional hypoglycemia, which affects all normal newborns in the first few days after birth; perinatal stress-induced hypoglycemia in high-risk newborns, which afflicts ∼1 in 1,200 newborns; and genetic forms of congenital hyperinsulinism which afflict ∼1 in 10,000-40,000 newborns. (1) Transitional hyperinsulinism in normal newborns reflects persistence of the low glucose threshold for insulin secretion during fetal life into the first few postnatal days. Recent data indicate that the underlying mechanism is decreased trafficking of ATP-sensitive potassium channels to the beta-cell plasma membrane, likely a result of the hypoxemic state of fetal life. (2) Perinatal stress-induced hyperinsulinism in high-risk infants appears to reflect an exaggeration of this normal low fetal glucose threshold for insulin release due to more severe and prolonged exposure to perinatal hypoxemia. (3) Genetic hyperinsulinism, in contrast, reflects permanent genetic defects in various steps controlling beta-cell insulin release, such as inactivating mutations of the -channel genes. The purpose of this report is to review our current knowledge of these three major forms of neonatal hyperinsulinism as a foundation for the diagnosis and management of hypoglycemia in newborn infants. This includes selection of appropriate interventions based on underlying disease mechanism; combined monitoring of both plasma glucose and ketone levels to improve screening for infants with persistent forms of hypoglycemia; and ultimately to ensure that infants at risk of persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia are recognized prior to discharge from the nursery.
在过去的70年里,关于新生儿低血糖的争议一直集中在新生儿低血糖的数值“定义”上,而没有考虑其机制。这忽略了筛查新生儿低血糖的目的,即识别那些患有病理性低血糖的婴儿并预防低血糖脑损伤。最近的临床和基础研究表明,新生儿低血糖的三种主要形式是由高胰岛素血症引起的(同时也认识到在此时间段内可能还会出现其他罕见的激素或代谢状况)。这些包括过渡性低血糖,它影响所有正常新生儿出生后的头几天;高危新生儿的围产期应激性低血糖,每1200名新生儿中约有1例受其影响;以及先天性高胰岛素血症的遗传形式,每10000 - 40000名新生儿中约有1例受其影响。(1)正常新生儿的过渡性高胰岛素血症反映了胎儿期胰岛素分泌的低葡萄糖阈值在出生后的头几天持续存在。最近的数据表明,其潜在机制是ATP敏感性钾通道向β细胞膜的转运减少,这可能是胎儿期低氧状态的结果。(2)高危婴儿的围产期应激性高胰岛素血症似乎反映了由于更严重和持续的围产期低氧血症暴露,这种正常的胎儿期低葡萄糖阈值对胰岛素释放的放大作用。(3)相比之下,遗传性高胰岛素血症反映了控制β细胞胰岛素释放的各个步骤中的永久性遗传缺陷,例如 - 通道基因的失活突变。本报告的目的是回顾我们目前对新生儿高胰岛素血症这三种主要形式的认识,作为新生儿低血糖诊断和管理的基础。这包括根据潜在疾病机制选择适当的干预措施;联合监测血糖和酮体水平,以改善对持续性低血糖婴儿的筛查;并最终确保在新生儿出院前识别出有持续性高胰岛素血症性低血糖风险的婴儿。