Verhandelingen - Koninklijke Academie voor Geneeskunde van België
-
Verh. K. Acad. Geneeskd. Belg. · Jan 2002
ReviewEndocrinology in intensive care medicine: new insights and therapeutic consequences.
Sepsis, excessive inflammation, multiple organ failure and weakness prolong the need for intensive care in critically ill patients. Furthermore, the risk of death is high in the prolonged critically ill patient (20% after two weeks and 30% after 3 weeks). In prolonged critical illness, protein hypercatabolism and relative preservation of adipose tissue with fatty infiltration of vital organ systems is present. ⋯ In a large prospective randomized clinical study (1548 patients), we showed that ICU mortality was reduced by 42% with strict normalization of glycemia using exogenous insulin infusion (N Engl J Med 2001). This was due to prevention of typical ICU complications such as sepsis, multiple organ failure and need for prolonged invasive organ support and intensive care. We conclude that the new concept of reduced stimulation of pituitary function in prolonged critically ill patients opens new therapeutic perspectives to reverse the paradoxical 'wasting syndrome' but that maintenance of strict normoglycemia with insulin is crucial to also increase the chances of survival of these patients.