Hyperglycemia in diabetics and non-diabetics: Effect on the risk for and severity of pneumococcal pneumonia - 07/08/11
Summary |
Objectives |
We sought to determine whether poor glucose control among diabetics is associated with increased risk for pneumococcal pneumonia and whether elevated admitting plasma glucose (APG) levels are associated with increased severity of this infection in diabetic and non-diabetic patients.
Methods |
We compared hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) in diabetics who had pneumococcal pneumonia with diabetic case–controls who did not have pneumonia. In patients with pneumococcal pneumonia, we related APG to disease severity as determined by SMART-COP score, need for ICU admission, and mortality at 7 and 30 days.
Results |
Fifty-three of 233 patients with pneumococcal pneumonia (22.7%) were diabetic. Diabetics with pneumonia had poorer glycemic control than diabetic case–controls (HbA1c 8.2% vs. 7.2%, respectively, P<0.01). In pneumococcal pneumonia patients, SMART-COP scores, need for ICU admission, and mortality increased in proportion to the APG. These findings were attributable to the significant association between hyperglycemia and severity in non-diabetics.
Conclusions |
Poor glycemic control predisposes diabetics to pneumococcal pneumonia but, among diabetics, the degree of hyperglycemia at admission is not associated with increased disease severity. In contrast, among non-diabetics with pneumococcal pneumonia, hyperglycemia is a marker for severe disease and increased mortality, perhaps reflecting massive release of cytokines and glucocorticosteroids in overwhelming infection.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Pneumococcus, Pneumonia, Diabetes mellitus, Hyperglycemia, Severity of disease
Plan
Vol 60 - N° 2
P. 99-105 - février 2010 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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