Impact of dysglycemia during the ebb and flow phases of critically ill burn patients: An observational study

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q2 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE Burns Pub Date : 2025-03-12 DOI:10.1016/j.burns.2025.107454
Nico Haehn , Marius Huehn , Magdalena Ralser , Dmitrij Ziles , Gernot Marx , Jana Christina Mossanen , Benedikt Schaefer , Justus Patrick Beier , Thomas Breuer , Matthias Manfred Deininger
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Abstract

Background

Critically ill burn patients face severe metabolic stress, divided into early ebb and late flow phases, causing dysglycemia. While detrimental effects of hyper- and hypoglycemia in burn patients have been reported over the entire stay, its impact during the ebb and flow phases remains unexplored. This study is the first to investigate phase-separated dysglycemia for outcome prediction.

Methods

This retrospective, single-center observational study examined burn ICU patients between 2009 and 2022. Non-severe (ABSI<7) and severe (ABSI≥7) burn patients were investigated separately. Furthermore, the effect of low (<50 %) versus high (≥50 %) dysglycemic rates (<70 or >140 mg/dL) was evaluated within the ebb and flow phases. Dysglycemia was calculated using the time-unified rate, an innovative method representing blood glucose over time. The primary outcome of this study was mortality.

Results

This study included 67 non-severe and 101 severe burn patients. During the flow compared to the ebb phase, non-severe burn patients showed increased hyperglycemic rates (>140 mg/dL, p = 0.027) and mean blood glucose levels (p = 0.003), while severe burn patients showed increased glycemic variability (p < 0.001) and hypoglycemic rates (<70 mg/dL, p = 0.003). Non-severe burn patients with high dysglycemic rates showed increased length of ICU stay (ebb: p = 0.029, flow: p = 0.040) and pneumonia incidence (ebb: p = 0.005, flow: p = 0.002) compared to patients with low dysglycemic rates. High dysglycemic rate was associated with higher mortality in severe burn patients (ebb: p = 0.027, flow: p = 0.008). Multivariate logistic regression revealed that hyper- (OR: 1.034, 95 %-CI: [1.001–1.068], p = 0.045) and hypoglycemic rates (OR: 1.744, 95 %-CI: [1.180–2.577], p = 0.005) during the flow, but not the ebb phase, predicted mortality in severe burn patients.

Conclusions

This study suggests that increased dysglycemic rate plays a relevant role in both non-severe and severe burn patients, with a varying impact. Over time, the flow phase was characterized by higher glycemic variability as well as hyper- and hypoglycemic rates, with the latter two predicting mortality in severe burn patients. While larger cohorts are needed to confirm these findings, the data indicate that reducing the dysglycemic rate, particularly during the flow phase, could improve outcomes in critically ill burn patients.
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烧伤重症患者起伏期血糖异常的影响:观察研究
背景危重烧伤患者面临严重的代谢应激,分为早期低潮期和晚期低潮期,导致血糖异常。虽然烧伤患者的高血糖和低血糖的有害影响在整个住院期间都有报道,但其在退潮和潮起潮落阶段的影响仍未被研究。这项研究是第一个研究分相血糖异常的预后预测。方法本研究为回顾性、单中心观察性研究,对2009年至2022年ICU烧伤患者进行调查。非重度(ABSI<7)和重度(ABSI≥7)烧伤患者分别进行调查。此外,在低潮期和潮起潮落期评估低(<50 %)和高(≥50 %)血糖异常率(<;70或>;140 mg/dL)的影响。血糖异常是用时间统一率来计算的,这是一种代表血糖随时间变化的创新方法。这项研究的主要结果是死亡率。结果本研究纳入非重度烧伤患者67例,重度烧伤患者101例。在流相比,衰退阶段,不重的烧伤病人显示高血糖的增加率(140 mg / dL ,p = 0.027)和平均血糖水平(p = 0.003),而严重烧伤病人显示血糖变异性增加(p & lt; 0.001)和血糖过低的利率(& lt; 70 mg / dL, p = 0.003)。血糖异常率高的非重度烧伤患者在ICU的住院时间(ebb: p = 0.029,flow: p = 0.040)和肺炎发生率(ebb: p = 0.005,flow: p = 0.002)均高于血糖异常率低的患者。高血糖异常率与严重烧伤患者较高的死亡率相关(低潮:p = 0.027,低潮:p = 0.008)。多因素logistic回归显示,血流阶段的高血糖率(OR: 1.034, 95 %- ci: [1.001-1.068], p = 0.045)和低血糖率(OR: 1.744, 95 %- ci: [1.180-2.577], p = 0.005)与严重烧伤患者的死亡率相关,而与退潮阶段无关。结论本研究提示,血糖异常率升高在非重度和重度烧伤患者中均有相关作用,但影响各不相同。随着时间的推移,血流阶段的特征是更高的血糖变异性以及高血糖和低血糖率,后两者预测严重烧伤患者的死亡率。虽然需要更大的队列来证实这些发现,但数据表明,降低血糖异常率,特别是在血流阶段,可以改善危重烧伤患者的预后。
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来源期刊
Burns
Burns 医学-皮肤病学
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
18.50%
发文量
304
审稿时长
72 days
期刊介绍: Burns aims to foster the exchange of information among all engaged in preventing and treating the effects of burns. The journal focuses on clinical, scientific and social aspects of these injuries and covers the prevention of the injury, the epidemiology of such injuries and all aspects of treatment including development of new techniques and technologies and verification of existing ones. Regular features include clinical and scientific papers, state of the art reviews and descriptions of burn-care in practice. Topics covered by Burns include: the effects of smoke on man and animals, their tissues and cells; the responses to and treatment of patients and animals with chemical injuries to the skin; the biological and clinical effects of cold injuries; surgical techniques which are, or may be relevant to the treatment of burned patients during the acute or reconstructive phase following injury; well controlled laboratory studies of the effectiveness of anti-microbial agents on infection and new materials on scarring and healing; inflammatory responses to injury, effectiveness of related agents and other compounds used to modify the physiological and cellular responses to the injury; experimental studies of burns and the outcome of burn wound healing; regenerative medicine concerning the skin.
期刊最新文献
Erratum to "Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists after recent burn injury are associated with lower rates of infection, mortality, and opioid prescriptions" [Burns 52/2 (2026) 107848]. Clinical outcomes of bromelain-based enzymatic debridement (NexoBrid®): evidence from the Italian National Burn Database. Probiotic and prebiotic interventions in burn patients: A systematic review. Burn injury induces systemic inflammation and neuroinflammation with neurobehavioral sequalae in mice. The adverse effects of persistent wound stress on patients with type 2 diabetes. Part 1: Pathophysiological mechanisms and multi-organ impacts.
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