scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The Influence of Hyperglycemia and Diabetes Mellitus on Immediate and 3-Month Morbidity and Mortality After Acute Stroke

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
It is concluded that the association between glucose concentration and outcome is a reflection of stress relating to stroke severity, rather than a direct harmful effect of glucose on damaged neurons.
Abstract
• Fasting serum glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin, and fructosamine concentrations were determined in 304 consecutive subjects admitted with acute stroke, within 48 hours of ictus. Based on the medical history and these results, subjects were divided into known diabetics, newly diagnosed diabetics, subjects with stress hyperglycemia, and nondiabetics. The type of stroke was classified as lacunar infarct, cerebral infarct, or intracerebral hemorrhage, based on clinical examination by a neurologist and computed tomographic brain scan and/or autopsy. Immediate and 3-month outcomes were examined in relation to (1) fasting glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin, and fructosamine levels by stroke subtypes, and (2) glucose tolerance categories by stroke subtypes. A high fasting glucose level was associated with an increased mortality, but this was observed only among patients with intracerebral hemorrhage. Patients with stress hyperglycemia, but not diabetics, had increased mortality. In spite of having similar glucose concentrations to those patients with stress hyperglycemia, diabetics did not have a worse outcome compared with nondiabetics. It is concluded that the association between glucose concentration and outcome is a reflection of stress relating to stroke severity, rather than a direct harmful effect of glucose on damaged neurons.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Hyperglycemia: An Independent Marker of In-Hospital Mortality in Patients with Undiagnosed Diabetes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors determined the prevalence of in-hospital hyperglycemia and determined the survival and functional outcome of patients with and without a history of diabetes in patients admitted to the Georgia Baptist Medical Center.
Journal Article

Hyperglycemia: An independent marker of in-hospital mortality in patients with undiagnosed diabetes. Authors' reply

TL;DR: It is indicated that in-hospital hyperglycemia is a common finding and represents an important marker of poor clinical outcome and mortality in patients with and without a history of diabetes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stress Hyperglycemia and Prognosis of Stroke in Nondiabetic and Diabetic Patients A Systematic Overview

TL;DR: A systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature relating acute poststroke glucose levels to the subsequent course predicted increased risk of in-hospital mortality after ischemic stroke in nondiabetic patients and increase risk of poor functional recovery in nond iabetic stroke survivors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Association Between Hyperglycemia and Increased Hospital Mortality in a Heterogeneous Population of Critically Ill Patients

TL;DR: Even a modest degree of hyperglycemia occurring after intensive care unit admission was associated with a substantial increase in hospital mortality in patients with a wide range of medical and surgical diagnoses, adding predictive power above that achieved by APACHE II scores alone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stress-induced hyperglycemia.

TL;DR: Although randomized data suggesting benefit of controlling hyperglycemia in hospitalized patients are paltry, prospective controlled trials are feasible and should be initiated.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Fructosamine: A new approach to the estimation of serum glycosylprotein. An index of diabetic control

TL;DR: The development of a novel manual method designed to measure serum glycosylprotein as an index of diabetic control is described, which allows clear discrimination of normal and diabetic populations and is significantly correlated with fasting blood glucose concentration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Moderate hyperglycemia augments ischemic brain damage A neuropathologic study in the rat

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that hyperglycemia before severe brain ischemia or during moderate ischemIA markedly augments morphologic brain damage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increased damage after ischemic stroke in patients with hyperglycemia with or without established diabetes mellitus

TL;DR: Animal experiments employing controlled degrees of cerebral ischemia have demonstrated that elevated blood-brain glucose concentrations greatly enhance the extent and degree of subsequent brain damage, and whether or not this relationship applies in man was examined by retrospectively segregating patients admitted with the diagnosis of ischemic stroke into diabetic and nondiabetic groups.
Related Papers (5)