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An increase in blood glucose is a common clinical symptom in patients following traumatic brain injury. Studies confirm that death after traumatic brain injury was not only associated with nerve injury, but also correlated with abnormal physiological and metabolic reactions. Hyperglycemia is a manifestation of physiological and metabolic disorders after traumatic brain injury. Traumatic brain injury induced hyperglycemia, and then aggravated secondary injury to the brain. Therefore, it is of important clinical significance to study the treatment of hyperglycemia after traumatic brain injury.
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Hyperglycemia induced by traumatic brain injury is directly correlated with patient prognosis. Previous studies showed that if blood glucose could be controlled < 6.11 mmol/L, prognosis would be good and mortality would be decreased by approximately 50%. Moreover, the incidence of ICU-related complications, especially infection, was obviously reduced. A study concerning severe traumatic brain injury analyzed the recovery of patients at 18 days, 3 months and 1 year after trauma, and demonstrated that the prognosis of patients with blood glucose levels < 11.1 mmol/L within 24 hours of hospital admission was apparently better than those whose blood glucose levels were > 11.1 mmol/L. Hyperglycemia occurred after traumatic brain injury and was treated with intensive insulin therapy. Thus, blood glucose levels were controlled between 4.4 and 6.1 mmol/L, which noticeably shortened insulin use and decreased the incidence of multiple organ dysfunction and mortality of patients with traumatic brain injury.
It is well known that hyperglycemia will appear after traumatic brain injury. However, there are few clinical studies addressing continuous dynamic monitoring of blood glucose of traumatic brain injury patients and the relationship between changes in blood glucose and the degree of traumatic brain injury. Insulin therapy for reducing injury to secondary nerve cells after traumatic brain injury and for improving functional prognosis has also not been explored.
When blood glucose level is > 7.0 mmol/L as measured twice by rapid examination within 2 hours of hospital admission, patients with hyperglycemia after severe closed traumatic brain injury will be randomly divided into the intensive therapy group and nonintensive therapy group according to the random number table.
Patients in both groups will be treated using the protocol as follows.
Blood glucose measurement: Capillary blood will be obtained from the tip of the ring finger to measure blood glucose. For a period, the blood should be collected from the same finger to make sure an accurate measurement occurs. When blood glucose of a patient undergoing transfusion was measured, blood should be collected from the tip of the finger of the limb without transfusion to ensure the accuracy of measurement.
Monitoring of target blood glucose: insulin dose will be selected in accordance with the Yale Insulin Infusion Protocol.
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144 participants in 4 patient groups
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Wenxue Wang, M.D., Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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