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Glycemic control with use of insulin glargine after cardiothoracic surgery: a retrospective study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess whether using subcutaneous insulin (glargine) when transitioning from intravenous insulin in cardiothoracic surgery patients improves blood sugar control post-surgery.
  • Before the change, a sliding scale insulin (SSI) was the only method used, and results were compared to the new protocol.
  • Ultimately, while diabetic patients who received glargine had better glucose control with less need for SSI, the overall differences in blood sugar management between the two groups were not statistically significant, indicating the need for further research.

Article Abstract

Objective: Perioperative glycemic control in critically ill cardiothoracic surgery patients may improve postsurgical outcomes. The objective of the study was to compare outcomes before and after the implementation of a protocol using subcutaneous (SC) glargine at transition from intravenous insulin infusion (IVII).

Methods: In August 2006, the Cleveland Clinic began using glargine and supplemental rapid-acting sliding scale insulin (SSI) at transition from IVII (glargine-SSI group). Before August 2006, only supplemental insulin was used (SSI-only group). The primary outcome was first blood glucose (BG1) after discontinuation of IVII. Secondary outcomes included the absolute difference between the last glucose before discontinuation of IVII (BG0) and BG1, mean glucose in the first 24 hours after discontinuation of IVII (BG24), need for SSI, and hypoglycemia.

Results: Mean BG0, BG1, and BG24, and the difference between BG1 and BG0 and between BG24 and BG0 were not significantly different between groups. Diabetes mellitus (DM) patients who had received glargine had a lower mean difference between BG1 and BG0 and a lower mean BG24 than those who had not received glargine (14.6 mg/dL vs. 33.1 mg/dL; P = .20, and 163.8 mg/dL vs. 177.9 mg/dL; P = .29, respectively). A higher proportion of DM patients needed SSI than did non-DM patients (82% vs. 36%; P<.001).

Conclusion: Glargine administered at the cessation of IVII enabled less SSI coverage in diabetic patients subsequent to transition from IVII. However, there was no significant difference in BG control between the glargine-SSI and SSI-only groups. Prospective studies involving more patients are needed to show possible clinically significant benefits of this intervention.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4158/EP12404.ORDOI Listing

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