Relation of hyperglycemia early in ischemic brain infarction to cerebral anatomy, metabolism, and clinical outcome.
Publication/Presentation Date
8-1-1990
Abstract
We studied the relation of serum glucose level measured in the first 12 hours of symptoms to the clinical findings, results of computed tomography (CT), and patterns of cerebral metabolism in 39 patients who had acute ischemic cerebral infarction. Structural damage was assessed by CT. Metabolic disruption was assessed using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose and positron emission tomography (PET). Median initial serum glucose concentration was 155 mg/dl (6.7 mM). Clinical recovery was significantly poorer in patients with initial serum glucose levels higher than the median (p less than 0.05, chi square). PET tended to show normal results or minor abnormalities in patients with initial glucose levels less than the median, as opposed to lobar or multilobe abnormalities in patients with levels that were higher than the median (p less than 0.05, Kendall's Tau b). The severity of hypometabolism in the ischemic region, expressed as the percent asymmetry of local cerebral glucose metabolism between homologous brain regions, was greater in patients with initial glycemia concentrations higher than the median (p less than 0.001, t test). Relationships of serum glucose level with metabolic derangement and structural damage, but not outcome, held true in patients without a history of diabetes mellitus.
Volume
28
Issue
2
First Page
129
Last Page
135
ISSN
0364-5134
Published In/Presented At
Kushner, M., Nencini, P., Reivich, M., Rango, M., Jamieson, D., Fazekas, F., Zimmerman, R., Chawluk, J., Alavi, A., & Alves, W. (1990). Relation of hyperglycemia early in ischemic brain infarction to cerebral anatomy, metabolism, and clinical outcome. Annals of neurology, 28(2), 129–135. https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.410280204
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
2221843
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article