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Artificial endocrine pancreas with a closed-loop system effectively suppresses the accelerated hyperglycemic status after reperfusion during aortic surgery

Artificial endocrine pancreas with a closed-loop system effectively suppresses the accelerated... ObjectivesTo control intraoperative hyperglycemia in patients who underwent aortic surgery using STG-55® artificial endocrine pancreas and clarify the effectiveness of this device.MethodsBlood glucose control using the STG-55® was performed in 18 patients (15 men and 3 women; age, 66 ± 10 years) who required hypothermic circulatory arrest (STG-55® group). Seventeen patients (10 men and 7 women; age, 71 ± 8 years) whose blood glucose was controlled using the conventional method were included in the control group. Glucose concentration was controlled with the aim of maintaining it at 150 mg/dl.ResultsIn both groups, the blood glucose concentrations did not significantly change during the interruption of systemic perfusion; however, a sharp increase was noted immediately after reperfusion. Although the hyperglycemic status persisted after reperfusion in the control group, it was effectively suppressed in the STG-55® group (STG® vs. control group at 50 min after reperfusion: 180 ± 35 vs. 212 ± 47 mg/dl, p = 0.026) and blood glucose concentration reached the target value of 150 mg/dl at 100 min after reperfusion (STG® vs. control group: 153 ± 29 vs. 215 ± 43 mg/dl, p = 0.0008). The total administered insulin dose was 175 ± 81 U and 5 ± 3 U in the STG® and control groups, respectively (p < 0.0001).ConclusionsTo treat the accelerated hyperglycemic status in aortic surgery requiring circulatory arrest, strict glycemic control using an artificial endocrine pancreas might be beneficial. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png General Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Springer Journals

Artificial endocrine pancreas with a closed-loop system effectively suppresses the accelerated hyperglycemic status after reperfusion during aortic surgery

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References (18)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright © The Japanese Association for Thoracic Surgery 2020
ISSN
1863-6705
eISSN
1863-6713
DOI
10.1007/s11748-020-01415-1
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ObjectivesTo control intraoperative hyperglycemia in patients who underwent aortic surgery using STG-55® artificial endocrine pancreas and clarify the effectiveness of this device.MethodsBlood glucose control using the STG-55® was performed in 18 patients (15 men and 3 women; age, 66 ± 10 years) who required hypothermic circulatory arrest (STG-55® group). Seventeen patients (10 men and 7 women; age, 71 ± 8 years) whose blood glucose was controlled using the conventional method were included in the control group. Glucose concentration was controlled with the aim of maintaining it at 150 mg/dl.ResultsIn both groups, the blood glucose concentrations did not significantly change during the interruption of systemic perfusion; however, a sharp increase was noted immediately after reperfusion. Although the hyperglycemic status persisted after reperfusion in the control group, it was effectively suppressed in the STG-55® group (STG® vs. control group at 50 min after reperfusion: 180 ± 35 vs. 212 ± 47 mg/dl, p = 0.026) and blood glucose concentration reached the target value of 150 mg/dl at 100 min after reperfusion (STG® vs. control group: 153 ± 29 vs. 215 ± 43 mg/dl, p = 0.0008). The total administered insulin dose was 175 ± 81 U and 5 ± 3 U in the STG® and control groups, respectively (p < 0.0001).ConclusionsTo treat the accelerated hyperglycemic status in aortic surgery requiring circulatory arrest, strict glycemic control using an artificial endocrine pancreas might be beneficial.

Journal

General Thoracic and Cardiovascular SurgerySpringer Journals

Published: Aug 26, 2020

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