THIAMINE AND HIGH DOSE INSULIN TREATMENT FOR SEPSIS

Patrick Bradley
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Abstract

Sepsis is a major health problem and accounts for 20% of deaths worldwide. It is the most expensive condition treated in United States hospitals at $62 billion per year or about $46,000 per patient. Treatment consisting largely of fluid resuscitation and antibiotics has only a marginal impact. Mortality is about 27% for hospitalised patients and about 42% for patients in intensive care. There are two phases of sepsis – a hyperinflammatory phase and a subsequent hypoinflammatory phase. During the hyperinflammatory phase, the metabolic rate increases, and this is associated with an increase in body temperature and a rapid escalation of immune system functioning including increased numbers of leucocytes and their migration to infected and damaged tissues and increased supply and consumption of glucose to fuel this immune system. During the subsequent hypoinflammatory phase, the metabolic rate decreases, and this is associated with a decrease in body temperature and a generalised decrease in the physiological activity of many organs including the immune system akin to hibernation. The activated immune system has priority for the available glucose over most other organs and physiological functions during such potentially life-threatening circumstances. Thus, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production by mitochondria (the source of energy at the cellular level for the organism as a whole) also has a lower priority for the available glucose relative to the activated immune system. If glucose availability is threatened, then the mitochondrial production of ATP is partially or substantially suppressed in favour of glycolysis because glycolysis can rapidly produce large quantities of ATP that are necessary for immune cell function in infected, anaerobic, ischaemic, or damaged tissues. However, glycolysis is only a temporary fix as it cannot produce the quantities of ATP necessary on an ongoing basis for the normal functioning of the healthy animal. Mitochondrial production of ATP must be recommenced for full recovery. It appears that the partial or substantial suppression of mitochondrial production of ATP by activation of the immune response becomes relatively fixated in some patients, leading to a substantial ATP deficit. This is the fundamental issue of sepsis. This paper reviews the metabolism of glucose and insulin during sepsis and concludes that high dose insulin with mild hyperglycaemia in conjunction with the intravenous administration of thiamine, an inhibitor of the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase enzymes, to re-establish physiological ATP production by mitochondria, administered early in the hypometabolic (hypoinflammatory) phase of sepsis, may enhance survival relative to thiamine alone.
硫胺素和大剂量胰岛素治疗败血症
败血症是一个主要的健康问题,占全世界死亡人数的20%。它是美国医院治疗的最昂贵的疾病,每年花费620亿美元,即每位患者约4.6万美元。主要由液体复苏和抗生素组成的治疗只有轻微的影响。住院病人死亡率约为27%,重症监护病人死亡率约为42%。脓毒症有两个阶段——高炎症期和随后的低炎症期。在高炎症期,代谢率增加,这与体温升高和免疫系统功能的快速升级有关,包括白细胞数量增加及其向感染和受损组织的迁移,葡萄糖的供应和消耗增加,为免疫系统提供燃料。在随后的低炎症期,代谢率下降,这与体温下降和包括免疫系统在内的许多器官的生理活动普遍下降有关,类似于冬眠。在这种可能危及生命的情况下,激活的免疫系统比大多数其他器官和生理功能更优先考虑可用的葡萄糖。因此,相对于激活的免疫系统,线粒体(生物体整体细胞水平的能量来源)产生的三磷酸腺苷(ATP)对可利用葡萄糖的优先级也较低。如果葡萄糖的可用性受到威胁,则线粒体产生ATP的过程会被部分或大量抑制,从而有利于糖酵解,因为糖酵解可以快速产生大量ATP,这是感染、无氧、缺血或受损组织中免疫细胞功能所必需的。然而,糖酵解只是一种暂时的修复,因为它不能持续产生健康动物正常运作所需的ATP量。线粒体必须重新产生ATP才能完全恢复。似乎在一些患者中,通过激活免疫反应而部分或大量抑制线粒体产生ATP变得相对固定,导致大量ATP缺陷。这是败血症的根本问题。本文回顾了脓毒症期间葡萄糖和胰岛素的代谢,并得出结论,在脓毒症的低代谢(低炎症)阶段早期给予高剂量胰岛素伴轻度高血糖并联合静脉给予硫胺素(丙酮酸脱氢酶激酶的抑制剂),以重建线粒体的生理ATP生成,可能比单独给予硫胺素更能提高生存率。
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