Current diabetes reports
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Current diabetes reports · Feb 2013
ReviewGlycemic variability in hospitalized patients: choosing metrics while awaiting the evidence.
Hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, preexisting diabetes, and glycemic variability each may affect hospital outcomes. Observational findings derived from randomized trials or retrospective studies suggest that independent of hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia, a relationship exists between variability and hospital outcomes. A review of studies conducted in diverse hospital populations is reported here, showing a relationship between measures of variability and nonglycemic outcomes, including ICU and hospital mortality and length of stay. "Glycemic variability" has an intuitive meaning, understood as a propensity of a single patient to develop repeated episodes of excursions of BG over a relatively short period of time that exceed the amplitude expected in normal physiology. ⋯ Especially in relation to uncontrolled diabetes, there is a need to know whether rapid correction of chronic hyperglycemia adversely affects hospital outcomes. We have some understanding of how to control or prevent change of overall glycemia, and less understanding of how to control variability. Each may be associated with outcomes, and each may be detected by a high SD, but it remains uncertain whether intervention to prevent either pattern of changing glycemia would affect outcomes.
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Hyperglycemic crisis, which includes Diabetic Ketoacidosis and Hyperglycemic Hyperosmolar State, is a common diagnosis in high acuity hospital units and admission rates continue to increase despite preventive strategies. While diabetic ketoacidosis remains a common cause of death in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes, in adults reported mortality is variable and depends on the severity of metabolic derangement and the presence of other acute and chronic conditions. Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state, and the overlap syndrome of hyperosmolar ketoacidosis, have a higher overall mortality though outcomes are improving. We discuss the diagnosis, epidemiology, and management strategies with particular reference to commonly encountered pitfalls in care and provide an updated perspective on the shifts in the epidemiology and novel management strategies for these important disorders.
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The dramatic increase in the prevalence of obesity in women of reproductive age has resulted in approximately 1 in 5 women being obese when they conceive. Bariatric surgery has been shown to be the most effective long-term weight loss strategy in obese women in this age group. ⋯ In patients where nutrition is properly maintained and monitored, the risks for obesity-related obstetric complications, such as gestational diabetes mellitus and hypertension, are significantly reduced, but possibly at the expense of an increase in neonates born small-for-gestational-age. At the present, definitive conclusions cannot be drawn concerning the risk for Caesarian delivery, differences in type of bariatric procedure, or the optimal surgery-to-conception interval.