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Diabetes overview

Diabetes overview. Tom Archer, MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia. Diabetic outpatient case:. “Healthy” 48 y.o. diabetic for hernia repair / GA. Elective, but patient has made plans. Pt. stopped his metformin 48 hours before surgery, per instructions, and finger stick blood sugar = 357.

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Diabetes overview

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  1. Diabetes overview Tom Archer, MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia

  2. Diabetic outpatient case: • “Healthy” 48 y.o. diabetic for hernia repair / GA. • Elective, but patient has made plans. • Pt. stopped his metformin 48 hours before surgery, per instructions, and finger stick blood sugar = 357. • Surgeon wants to proceed with “minor procedure in a healthy patient”.

  3. Do we…? • Proceed immediately and manage hyperglycemia “on the fly”? • Delay to later on the same day? • Delay to another day?

  4. Other questions: • What is our blood glucose “cut-off” that makes us delay surgery? • Should we insist on other tests or evaluations before proceeding?

  5. Would you proceed with the case immediately?UTHSCSA faculty response:

  6. Your blood glucose “cut-off”, above which you would not immediately proceed with case. UTHSCSA faculty response:

  7. Other considerations: • Evaluate for dehydration and acidosis. • Get EKG, Chem 7, ABG or urine for glucose / ketones. • Worry about infection and wound healing. • Worry about DKA, MI, stroke, hypotension.

  8. My perspective: • Evidence-based safety, above all. • No UNNECESSARY delays or cancellations. • We have to JUSTIFY delays or cancellations. • Safety does NOT = more tests and delays.

  9. Dangers of hyperglycemia • Long term dangers in asymptomatic patients. • Short term dangers in sick patients. • No studies of short term dangers of HG in healthy patients!

  10. Enormous dangers of hyperglycemia in pregnant patients! • HG alters DNA transcription, causing: • “Diabetic embryopathy”-- birth defects. • “Diabetic fetopathy”– macrosomia and organ immaturity for gestational age (e.g. lung). • Placental vascular disease (IUGR, chronic malnutrition / hypoxia) • Non-specific inflammation, vasoconstriction, coagulation and fibrosis. • Decreased neutrophil / monocyte function. • Neonatal hypoglycemia

  11. Obesity Type II DM in 2006 Inflammation Genetic predisposition Insulin resistance Hyperglycemia Atherosclerosis Nephropathy Retinopathy Neuropathy Immune dysfunction Poor wound healing Decreased insulin output Pancreatic beta cell damage

  12. Hyperglycemia “cries wolf” to the innate immune system– activating it when it is not needed and weakening its capacity to respond to a real infection. portland.indymedia.org accessed on Google images

  13. Inflammation as a cause of disease has entered the popular imagination. Diet (“macronutrients”) is rightly perceived as a factor in causing inflammation.

  14. So, food kills! Calorie restricted mice live 30% longer than normally fed mice. Calorie restricted mice http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2006/images/jan2006_cover_lef_04.jpg

  15. Insulin is a ANABOLIC hormone • Causes glucose uptake into muscle and liver, amino acid uptake into muscle and free fatty acid (FFA) uptake into adipose tissue. • Insulin affects gene transcription, allowing tissue growth and translocation of GLUT4 transport protein to the cell membrane. • Insulin is NOT just about blood glucose control!

  16. Insulin enables three distinct stages of glucose utilization Microvascular function—without insulin, microvasculature (capillaries and precapillary sphincters) do not supply blood appropriately to muscle cells. Uptake of glucose into muscle cell requires GLUT4 transport protein, made in response to insulin. Phosphorylation of glucose to glucose-6-phosphate by hexokinase inside the mitochondrion, a limiting step of glucose utilization.

  17. European Journal of Endocrinology 150 97–104 European Journal of Endocrinology 150 97–104 Bo Ahre´n and Giovanni Pacini

  18. The hyperbolic function in diabetes Obese non-diabetic (insulin resistance, but compensated) B Pancreatic output of insulin Thin non-diabetic C Obese, diabetic (no longer compensated) A Peripheral tissue sensitivity to insulin

  19. The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial • Definitive, landmark 1993 study. 1441 patients with type I DM followed for 9 years. • 35-70% reduction in retinopathy, neuropathy and nephropathy with intensive blood glucose control.

  20. Microvasculardisease Incidence per1000 patient-years Myocardialinfarction Updated mean HbA1c (%) Hgb A1c vs. Microvascular Disease and Myocardial Infarction in type II DM. UKPDS 35. BMJ 2000; 321: 405-12

  21. DIGAMI study:Intensive blood glucose control after AMI lessens mortality. • Pts. had suspected MI and BG > 200 mg% • Both groups got thrombolysis, aspirin, beta blockers and ACE inhibitors as indicated. Malmberg K DIGAMI study 1999

  22. Admission glucose predicts long term mortality after AMI. Intensive insulin therapy (over months) mitigates effect of admission blood glucose on mortality. 234 – 297 mg % <234 mg % > 297 mg % (Malmberg K DIGAMI study 1999)

  23. Q: How does glycemic control compare with other post- AMI interventions?A: Extremely well! • Absolute reduction of death rate: • Thrombolysis: 3.7% • Acute beta blockade: 3.5% • Chronic beta blockade: 9.3% • Long term simvastatin: 10.4% • Aspirin: 3.8% (CV events). • DIGAMI blood glucose control: 15% absolute reduction of death rate over 3.4 years!

  24. Intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients (Van den Berghe et. al. 2001) • Conventional therapy: Average BG = 173. • Intensive therapy: Average BG = 103. • Intensive therapy decreased: • mortality (4.6% vs. 8%) • renal failure • sepsis • polyneuropathy • prolonged mechanical ventilation • red cell transfusions

  25. Trauma patients– thresholds for damage from HG: • Yendamuri 2003: HG > 135 mg / dL  increased ICU LOS, infection and mortality. • Laird 2004: HG > 200 mg / dL  increased mortality and infection.

  26. Cardiac surgery and hyperglycemia • CPB damages endothelium (apart from its role in causing hyperglycemia). • CPB and hypothermia cause extreme hyperglycemia– which damages endothelium. • CPB is a “double insult” for endothelium.

  27. Tight glycemic control in diabetic CABG patients improves outcomes.Lazar 2004, Ouattara 2005 • Tight blood glucose control (target 125-200 mg %) significantly reduced: • Atrial fibrillation • Sternal and leg wound infections and pneumonia • Time on ventilator • Maximum weight gain (edema?) • ICU stay duration • Post-op hospital stay • Recurrent ischemia • Angina class • Mortality in first two years

  28. Increasing mean intraoperative blood glucose is associated with increasing morbidity in cardiac surgery Gandhi GY 2005

  29. Furnary 2003 • Best results with average post-CABG glucose < 150 mg %. • Insulin infusion needed until POD #3

  30. Changing practice: downward trend over time in average post- CABG glucose. Furnary 2002

  31. Pre-op Hgb A1c > 7% associated with increased infections in surgical patientsDronge AS 2006 • 647 known diabetic VA patients for non-cardiac surgery. • Infectious outcomes followed were: pneumonia, wound infection, urinary tract infection or sepsis. • Retrospective analysis and statistical association only– no proven causation.

  32. So should we delay elective surgery if Hgb A1c > 7%? • Discussion of this option at UTHSCSA. “Be careful what you wish for.” • Be wary of setting unnecessarily stringent standards. • You may get sued if you don’t adhere to your “standard” and there is a problem. • It’s hard to abolish a standard, once set.

  33. Paying (and suing?) for glycemic control in cardiac and general surgery? • Will glycemic control soon be monitored and rewarded / punished by CMMS and other payers? • “… perioperative maintenance of normoglycemia will become a valid performance measure for practicing surgical specialists.” • CMMS “target” in Turina study was 200 mg %. “150 mg % is better,” say commenting surgeons. Turina M 2006

  34. Hyperglycemia and the brain: • Cardiac arrest, stroke, neurotrauma and neurosurgery: • Both animal and human studies show that hyperglycemia during or after brain injury causes worse outcomes. Capes SE 2001, Jeremitsky E 2005, Wass CT 1996

  35. Hyperglycemia damages (“activates”) the endothelium. Hyperglycemia causes inflammation. Reinhart K 2002, Dandona P 2005 J Clin Invest, Dandona P 2003 Curr Drug Targets

  36. Hyperglycemia, sepsis and pre-eclampsia all “activate” (damage) endothelium, white cells and platelets, leading to white cell adhesion and infiltration, thrombosis and edema (inflammation). WBC WBC Hyperglycemia, sepsis or pre-eclampsia Platelet Platelets Protein (edema) Archer TL 2006 unpublished

  37. HG damages mitochondria • HG causes excessive entry of electrons (as NADH) into mitochondrial electron transport chain. • Excess electrons create reactive oxygen species, which damage mitochondria.

  38. HG produces advanced glycation end-products (AGE) • Mechanically cross link and stiffen collagen and elastin fibers, decreasing tissue elasticity (e.g. arteries). • Activate AGE receptors on macrophages to produce inflammatory mediators.

  39. Cooper ME 2004

  40. Advanced Glycation Endproducts(AGE) • Stiffen tissues, ? Causing • Atherosclerosis • Diastolic dysfunction • Stiff joints • Cooper ME 2004

  41. Can we reverse AGE? • Alagebrium chloride is in phase II trials– breaks AGE cross-links and restores vascular flexibility. • Pimagedine appears to block cross-link formation. • Reversal / prevention of atherosclerosis, systolic hypertension and diastolic dysfunction? Cooper ME 2004

  42. Endothelial cells send molecular signals to surrounding smooth muscle Insulin makes endothelium produce Glucose makes endothelium produce vasodilatory signals (NO, prostacyclin) Vessel lumen vasoconstrictive signals (thromboxane, endothelin) Archer TL 2006 unpublished, Idea from Dandona P 2004

  43. How rapidly can endothelial “activation” occur? • Evidence from 300 cal of oral glucose vs. 300 cal of vodka. • Oral glucose increases inflammatory markers within 2 hours. • Equal calories as ethanol do not. • Is this relevant to our outpatient scenario? We don’t know. Dhindsa S 2004

  44. Back to the outpatient case… • Why is blood glucose = 357 so bad in ICU patient, yet well-tolerated in many ambulatory patients? • Should we delay the case, since blood glucose in critically ill patients appears to be increasingly dangerous above the 150 mg % range? • Or should we proceed, since no one has shown that short-term hyperglycemia harms asymptomatic patients?

  45. Critical illness and hyperglycemia work synergistically to damage endothelium. • The significance of a blood glucose level depends on what else is going on with the patient’s endothelium. In other words, we have to look at a given blood sugar value in context.

  46. For any given blood glucose value, end organ damage will depend on degree of non-hyperglycemic endothelial damage. Zone of severe end-organ damage Non-hyperglycemic endothelial damage (sepsis, etc.) Zone of Zone of moderate end- limited organ damage end-organ damage Zone of no end-organ damage Blood glucose Archer TL 2006 unpublished

  47. Hyperglycemia may cause different degrees of end-organ damage, depending on the degree of pre-existing endothelial damage. *Patient B Zone of severe end-organ damage Non-hyperglycemic endothelial damage (sepsis, etc.) Zone of Zone of moderate end- limited organ damage end-organ damage Zone of no end-organ damage *Patient A Blood glucose Archer TL 2006 unpublished

  48. For any degree of non-hyperglycemic endothelial damage, end organ damage will depend on level of hyperglycemia. Zone of severe end-organ damage Non-hyperglycemic endothelial damage (sepsis, etc.) Zone of Zone of moderate end- limited organ damage end-organ damage Zone of no end-organ damage Blood glucose Archer TL 2006 unpublished

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