Type 2 diabetes and critical illness: spot the difference

Diabetes Week started on Sunday 12 June, and to mark this we asked Associate Editor from Critical Care Jean-Charles Preiser about some of the challenges in identifying the differences between type 2 diabetes and critical illness.

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Type 2 diabetes mellitus and stress hyperglycemia (excess glucose in the blood) during critical illness appear completely differently by several aspects, such as; the first is chronic, well defined and epidemic as a result of the way of life in industrialized countries, while the second is acute by definition and can encompass a broad range of conditions encountered everywhere.

In spite of the differences, type 2 diabetes and critical illness also share some similarities, in terms of pathophysiology, treatment and outcomes, as described below.

Insulin resistance

Insulin resistance is the typical hallmark of type 2 diabetes, and results in chronic hyperglycemia, itself involved in most of the long-term complications of diabetes. In the critically ill, insulin resistance is also very frequent

Insulin resistance is the typical hallmark of type 2 diabetes, and results in chronic hyperglycemia, itself involved in most of the long-term complications of diabetes. In the critically ill, insulin resistance is also very frequent and is one of the key pathophysiological mechanisms of stress-related hyperglycemia.

During the acute phase, the presence of insulin resistance is considered as an adaptive component of the stress response. However, after the resolution of the acute phase, prolonged insulin resistance is associated with poor outcome, via the toxicity of severe hyperglycemia.

Recent data reported by independent investigators consistently suggest that the occurrence of stress hyperglycemia is a risk factor for the development of diabetes after the resolution of critical illness.

Excess glucose

The presence of type 2 diabetes mellitus and stress hyperglycemia can be easily overlooked and considered as minor or transient complications. The lack of awareness and of standardization represents additional hurdles to the dissemination of knowledge.

The presence of diabetes is most often based on medical records, where the type of diabetes, degree of control and treatment are undefined.

The metrics used to report and to describe stress hyperglycemia is highly variable. Hence, the message sent to the medical community unfamiliar with these areas can be confusing.

Likewise, the metrics used to report and to describe stress hyperglycemia is highly variable. Hence, the message sent to the medical community unfamiliar with these areas can be confusing.

Chronic treatment

Once a patient with type 2 diabetes is admitted in an intensive care unit, their chronic treatment is most often discontinued and commonly replaced by insulin. Whether this practice is superior to the continuation of oral drugs at a dose adapted to the current patient’s condition has not been assessed in detail.

Furthermore, the optimal glycemic target can differ according to the level of control assessed by admission glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c). Prospective trials are underway to test this hypothesis.

Finally, the effects of diabetes-specific enteral formulas on stress hyperglycemia in critically ill patients need to be carefully assessed.

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One Comment

bulut

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The idea that diabetes/metabolic syndrome is caused by carbohydrate intake and high GI foods is a gross oversimplification- especially when one does not take into account whether whatever carbohydrate is ingested in processed/refined or not.

Foods are also generally not even in a vacuum like they were for the GI testing – by adding fats and proteins to your meals like you normally would – you get an ENTIRELY different GI response as compared to the GI itself.

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