新生儿低血糖:与不良结局相关的特征

Biology of the neonate Pub Date : 2006-01-01 Epub Date: 2006-03-09 DOI:10.1159/000091948
Paul J Rozance, William W Hay
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引用次数: 199

摘要

这篇综述文章的目的是从文献中记录新生儿(足月和早产儿)血/血浆葡萄糖浓度和相关临床体征和状况的值,这些值表明低血糖是急性和/或持续性神经损伤的近因的合理临床可能性,并回顾可能影响低血糖新生儿最终结局的低血糖的生理和病理生理反应。我们的总体结论是,文献中没有足够的信息来定义任何一个葡萄糖值,在任何时间或任何特定时期,在婴儿群体或任何特定婴儿中,低于该值中枢神经系统就会发生不可修复的低血糖损伤。长期和严重的神经功能障碍(昏迷,癫痫发作),极低和持续的血浆/血糖浓度(0 ~
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hypoglycemia in newborn infants: Features associated with adverse outcomes.

The purpose of this review article is to document from the literature values of blood/plasma glucose concentration and associated clinical signs and conditions in newborn infants (both term and preterm) that indicate a reasonable clinical probability that hypoglycemia is a proximate cause of acute and/or sustained neurological injury and to review the physiological and pathophysiological responses to hypoglycemia that may influence the ultimate outcome of newborns with low blood glucose. Our overall conclusion is that there is inadequate information in the literature to define any one value of glucose below which irreparable hypoglycemic injury to the central nervous system occurs, at any one time or for any defined period of time, in a population of infants or in any given infant. Clinical signs of prolonged and severe neurological disturbance (coma, seizures), extremely and persistently low plasma/blood glucose concentrations (0 to <1.0 mmol/l [0 to <18-20 mg/dl] for more than 1-2 h), and the absence of other obvious central nervous system (CNS) pathology (hypoxia-ischemia, intracranial hemorrhage, infection, etc.) are important for the diagnosis of injury due to glucose deficiency. Specific conditions, such as persistent hyperinsulinemia with severe hypoglycemic episodes that include seizures, also contribute to the diagnosis of hypoglycemic injury. Such lack of definitive measures of injury specific to glucose deficiency indicates that clinicians should be on the alert for infants at risk of hypoglycemia and for clinical signs and conditions that might herald severe hypoglycemia; they should have a low threshold for investigating and diagnosing 'hypoglycemia' with frequent measurements of plasma/blood glucose concentration; and they should treat low glucose concentrations promptly and maintain them in a safe range. Because there is no conclusive evidence or consensus in the literature that defines an absolute value or duration of 'hypoglycemia' that must occur, with our without related clinical complications, to produce neurological injury, clinicians should consider the information currently available, determine a 'target' plasma or blood glucose concentration that is acceptable, and treat infants with glucose concentrations below this value accordingly. Our intent in this review article is to highlight the studies relevant to this issue and help clinicians formulate a safe and, hopefully, effective strategy for the diagnosis and treatment of hypoglycemia.

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