Hyperglycemia is common in patients undergoing cardiac surgery and is associated with poor outcomes. This is a review of the perioperative insulin protocol being used at Medanta, the Medicity, which has a large volume cardiac surgery setup. Preoperatively, patients are usually continued on their preoperative outpatient medications. Intravenous insulin infusion is intiated postoperatively and titrated using a column method with a choice of 7 scales. Insulin dose is calculated as a factor of blood glucose and patient′s estimated insulin sensitivity. A comparison of this protocol is presented with other commonly used protocols. Since arterial blood gas analysis is done every 4 hours for first two days after cardiac surgery, automatic data coll...
Background: It is not known whether rigorous intraoperative gly-cemic control reduces death and morb...
BACKGROUND: Continuous intravenous insulin infusion (CII) following coronary artery bypass graft (CA...
Diabetes mellitus increases the risk of infections in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. We hypoth...
Abstract Perioperative hyperglycaemia is associated with poor outcomes in patients undergoing cardia...
International audienceAIM: Perioperative tight blood glucose (BG) control using insulin therapy afte...
ObjectiveThe Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) has benchmarked 6:00 am blood glucose levels o...
OBJECTIVE — We performed a randomized trial to compare three insulin-titration protocols for tight g...
Drugs used in the perioperative period could have an effect on survival as recently pointed out by a...
Recent evidence in the fields of surgery, emergency and critical care medicine indicates that strict...
Introduction Perioperative hyperglycaemia is common during cardiac surgery and associated with posto...
Continuous insulin infusion was not an effective mode of treatment in maintaining safe blood glucose...
Background Glucose control is an important issue in post-operative patients. The objective here was ...
BG = blood glucose; CABG = coronary artery bypass graft; CII = continuous intravenous insulin infusi...
Objective. Using continuous glucose monitoring to determine diagnostic optimisation of metabolic sta...
Aims: Most cardiac surgery patients, with or without diabetes, develop perioperative hyperglycaemia,...
Background: It is not known whether rigorous intraoperative gly-cemic control reduces death and morb...
BACKGROUND: Continuous intravenous insulin infusion (CII) following coronary artery bypass graft (CA...
Diabetes mellitus increases the risk of infections in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. We hypoth...
Abstract Perioperative hyperglycaemia is associated with poor outcomes in patients undergoing cardia...
International audienceAIM: Perioperative tight blood glucose (BG) control using insulin therapy afte...
ObjectiveThe Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) has benchmarked 6:00 am blood glucose levels o...
OBJECTIVE — We performed a randomized trial to compare three insulin-titration protocols for tight g...
Drugs used in the perioperative period could have an effect on survival as recently pointed out by a...
Recent evidence in the fields of surgery, emergency and critical care medicine indicates that strict...
Introduction Perioperative hyperglycaemia is common during cardiac surgery and associated with posto...
Continuous insulin infusion was not an effective mode of treatment in maintaining safe blood glucose...
Background Glucose control is an important issue in post-operative patients. The objective here was ...
BG = blood glucose; CABG = coronary artery bypass graft; CII = continuous intravenous insulin infusi...
Objective. Using continuous glucose monitoring to determine diagnostic optimisation of metabolic sta...
Aims: Most cardiac surgery patients, with or without diabetes, develop perioperative hyperglycaemia,...
Background: It is not known whether rigorous intraoperative gly-cemic control reduces death and morb...
BACKGROUND: Continuous intravenous insulin infusion (CII) following coronary artery bypass graft (CA...
Diabetes mellitus increases the risk of infections in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. We hypoth...