Home Current Issue Previous Issues Published Ahead-of-Print CME For Authors Journal Info
Skip Navigation LinksHome > September 2007 - Volume 35 - Issue 9 > Clinical experience with tight glucose control by intensive...
You could be reading the full-text of this article now...
If you have access to this article through your institution, you can view this article in OvidSP.
Critical Care Medicine:
September 2007 - Volume 35 - Issue 9 - pp S503-S507
doi: 10.1097/01.CCM.0000278046.24345.C7
Scientific Reviews

Clinical experience with tight glucose control by intensive insulin therapy

Preiser, Jean-Charles MD, PhD; Devos, Philippe MD

Collapse Box

Abstract

Objective: To describe the current status and the clinical data related to the effects of tight glucose control by intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients.

Design: Review article.

Setting: University hospital.

Patients: Medical and surgical critically ill patients in whom a correlation between blood glucose and outcome variables were searched.

Interventions: Tight glucose control by intensive insulin therapy.

Measurements and Main Results: In contrast to the decreases in mortality and to low severity of adverse effects reported when insulin rate was titrated to keep blood glucose between 80 and 110 mg/dL, the benefits were not confirmed in multicenter prospective studies. Retrospective data found an association between a mean blood glucose level of <140–150 mg/dL and improved outcome. Currently unanswered issues include the optimal target for blood glucose, the effects of high blood glucose variability, the risks and hazards of hypoglycemia, and the potential influence of the underlying disorder on the effects of tight glucose control.

Conclusions: Recommendations regarding the practical aspects of tight glucose control by intensive insulin therapy cannot be presently issued. An intermediate target level for blood glucose of 140–180 mg/dL seems to be associated with the lowest risk-to-benefit ratio.

© 2007 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

 Error

Web Part Error: A Web Part or Web Form Control on this Page cannot be displayed or imported. The type could not be found or it is not registered as safe.

Error Details:
[UnsafeControlException: A Web Part or Web Form Control on this Page cannot be displayed or imported. The type could not be found or it is not registered as safe.]
  at Microsoft.SharePoint.ApplicationRuntime.SafeControls.GetTypeFromGuid(Guid guid)
  at Microsoft.SharePoint.WebPartPages.SPWebPartManager.CreateWebPartsFromRowSetData(Boolean onlyInitializeClosedWebParts)

Search for Similar Articles
You may search for similar articles that contain these same keywords or you may modify the keyword list to augment your search.