Hyperglycemia and glycemic variability are associated with the severity of sepsis in nondiabetic subjects

2017 
Abstract Purpose The purpose was to compare glucose variability (GV) obtained via continuous glucose monitoring between nondiabetic sepsis patients and healthy subjects and to seek associations between GV and sepsis severity in nondiabetic sepsis patients. Methods Nondiabetic sepsis inpatients and healthy controls received a 72-hour continuous glucose monitoring (iPro2, Medtronic) postadmission and post–oral glucose tolerance test, respectively. The mean glucose level (MGL) along with GV represented by standard deviation (SD) and the mean amplitude of glycemic excursion (MAGE) were calculated at 24 and 72 hours. Sepsis severity was evaluated with the Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment Score (SOFA). MGL and GV in patients with SOFA ≥9 and Results Thirty nondiabetic sepsis and 10 healthy subjects were recruited. No differences were found between groups except for higher patient age in sepsis patients. The MGL and MAGE 72h of sepsis patients were significantly higher than those of healthy subjects. MGL and GV 24h were higher in patients with SOFA ≥9 than in patients with SOFA 24h 195 ± 17 vs 139 ± 27, P 24h 32 [28, 36] vs 19 [5, 58], P  = .02; and MAGE 24h 94 [58, 153] vs 54 [16, 179], P  = .01). Conclusion Nondiabetic sepsis patients had higher MGL and GV values than healthy subjects. MGL and GV 24h were associated with sepsis severity.
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