AI Article Synopsis

  • Excessive hyperglycemia during critical illness is linked to significant brain damage, showing increased microglial activation, reduced astrocyte functionality, and heightened neuronal apoptosis.
  • Normoglycemia, achieved through insulin infusion, significantly reduces these negative effects compared to both uncontrolled and moderately controlled hyperglycemia.
  • The study suggests that maintaining normal blood glucose levels is crucial for protecting brain health during critical illness, based on both patient samples and an animal model observation.

Article Abstract

Context: Although preventing excessive hyperglycemia during critical illness may provide clinical neuroprotection, it remains debated whether normoglycemia is without risk for the brain.

Objective: To address this question, we compared the neuropathological alterations in microglia, astrocytes, and neurons, with uncontrolled hyperglycemia, moderately controlled hyperglycemia, and normoglycemia during human critical illness. We further investigated the time course in an animal model.

Design And Setting: We analyzed brain specimens from patients who died in the intensive care unit and from critically ill rabbits randomized to hyper- or normoglycemia. PATIENTS/OTHER PARTICIPANTS: We compared 10 critically ill patients randomized to normoglycemia (104 ±9 mg/dl) or moderate hyperglycemia (173 ±32 mg/dl), and five patients with uncontrolled hyperglycemia (254 ±83 mg/dl) with 16 controls (out of hospital sudden deaths). Critically ill rabbits were randomized to hyperglycemia (315 ±32 mg/dl) or normoglycemia (85 ±13 mg/dl) and studied after 3 and 7 d.

Interventions: Insulin was infused to control blood glucose.

Main Outcome Measures And Results: Patients with uncontrolled hyperglycemia showed 3.7-6-fold increased microglial activation, 54-95% reduced number and activation of astrocytes, more than 9-fold increased neuronal and glial apoptosis, and a 1.5-2-fold increase in damaged neurons in hippocampus and frontal cortex (all P ≤ 0.05). Most of these abnormalities were attenuated with moderate hyperglycemia and virtually absent with normoglycemia. Frontal cortex of hyperglycemic rabbits that had been critically ill for 3 d only revealed microglial activation, followed after 7 d by astrocyte and neuronal abnormalities similar to those observed in patients, all prevented by normoglycemia.

Conclusions: Preventing hyperglycemia with insulin during critical illness reduced neuropathological abnormalities, with microglial activation being the earliest preventable event. Whether these pathological findings associate with neurological outcome remains unknown.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2011-2971DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

critical illness
16
critically ill
16
uncontrolled hyperglycemia
12
microglial activation
12
hyperglycemia
9
neuropathological alterations
8
ill rabbits
8
rabbits randomized
8
moderate hyperglycemia
8
±32 mg/dl
8

Similar Publications

Objective: In this retrospective analysis, we explored the clinical characteristics and risk factors of secondary infections in patients with severe heatstroke with the aim to gain epidemiological insights and identify risk factors for secondary infections.

Method: The study included 129 patients with severe heatstroke admitted to the General Hospital of the Southern Theater Command of the PLA between January 1, 2011, and December 31, 2021. Patients were divided into an infection group (n = 24) and a non-infection group (n = 105) based on infection occurrence within 48 h of intensive care unit (ICU) admission.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: To describe the pharmacokinetics (PK) of linezolid in plasma and pleural fluid (PF) in critically ill patients with proven or suspected Gram-positive bacterial infections.

Patients And Methods: Observational PK study in 14 critically ill patients treated with linezolid at standard doses. Blood and PF samples were collected and analysed by HPLC.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) is an inborn error of metabolism characterized by the accumulation of branched-chain amino acids (leucine, isoleucine, and valine) caused by a defect in the branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex. Liver transplant is an effective therapy for MSUD, and patients can usually tolerate a regular diet after transplant without symptomatic metabolic decompensation. Most post-transplant patients do not follow a sick-day diet.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The impact of tobacco consumption on household catastrophic health expenditure in Türkiye.

East Mediterr Health J

December 2024

Department of Economics, Health Economics and Health Policy Research and Applciation Center, Hacettepe University, Ankara, Türkiye.

Background: Understanding the financial burden of smoking on households is crucial for developing effective strategies and policies to reduce smoking and mitigate its impact on household health.

Aim: To investigate the relationship between smoking and catastrophic health expenditure in Türkiye.

Methods: This cross-sectional study used microdata from household budget surveys conducted by the Turkish Statistical Institute in 2015 and 2019.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The generalisability of critical illness molecular phenotypes to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is unknown. We show that molecular phenotypes derived in high-income countries (hyperinflammatory and hypoinflammatory, reactive and uninflamed) stratify sepsis patients in Uganda by physiological severity, mortality risk and dysregulation of key pathobiological domains. A classifier model including data available at the LMIC bedside modestly discriminated phenotype assignment (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!