1. Etiology of hyperglycemia in critically ill children and the impact of organ dysfunction.
- Author
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El-Sherbini SA, Marzouk H, El-Sayed R, and Hosam-ElDin S
- Subjects
- Blood Glucose metabolism, C-Peptide blood, Case-Control Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Critical Illness, Egypt, Female, Homeostasis, Humans, Hyperglycemia epidemiology, Incidence, Infant, Insulin blood, Insulin-Secreting Cells pathology, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric, Male, Multiple Organ Failure epidemiology, Prospective Studies, Sepsis epidemiology, Hyperglycemia etiology, Multiple Organ Failure physiopathology, Sepsis complications, Stress, Physiological physiology
- Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to study the incidence of stress hyperglycemia in critically ill children and to investigate the etiological basis of the hyperglycemia based on homeostasis model assessment., Methods: This was a prospective cohort study in one of the pediatric intensive care units of Cairo University, including 60 critically ill children and 21 healthy controls. Serum blood glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels were measured within 24 hours of admission. Homeostasis model assessment was used to assess β-cell function and insulin sensitivity., Results: Hyperglycemia was estimated in 70% of patients. Blood glucose values ≥ 180mg/dL were associated with a poor outcome. Blood glucose levels were positively correlated with Pediatric Risk for Mortality (PRISM III) score and number of organ dysfunctions (p = 0.019 and p = 0.022, respectively), while insulin levels were negatively correlated with number of organ dysfunctions (r = -0.33, p = 0.01). Homeostasis model assessment revealed that 26 (43.3%) of the critically ill patients had low β-cell function, and 18 (30%) had low insulin sensitivity. Combined pathology was detected in 2 (3.3%) patients only. Low β-cell function was significantly associated with the presence of multi-organ dysfunction; respiratory, cardiovascular, and hematological dysfunctions; and the presence of sepsis., Conclusions: β-Cell dysfunction appeared to be prevalent in our cohort and was associated with multi-organ dysfunction.
- Published
- 2018
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