Relationship between blood glucose variability and muscle composition in ICU patients receiving nutrition support: A pilot study
2021
Nienow, Morgan K. | Foley, Sharon P. | Nowak, Kristen L. | Braunschweig, Carol A. | Peterson, Sarah J.
Many critically ill patients experience increased blood glucose variability (BGV). The objective of the current pilot study was to assess the relationship between muscle composition (defined as average Hounsfield units (HU)) among ICU patients with an abdominal CT scan within seven days of intubation, and BGV (defined as coefficient of variation (CV)) calculated from blood glucose levels measured each morning while intubated. The first serum blood glucose measurement obtained each day during intubation was recorded, blood glucose CV ((mean/SD)∗100) was calculated. Cross-sectional muscle area (CSA; cm²) at the third lumbar region was identified using the −29 to +150 HU range; muscle composition was calculated as the average HU. BGV predictors were determined using linear regression. Eighty-two patients were included (53% female), with a median age of 64 (25th, 75 percentile (IQR): 51, 70) years. The median CV was 29% (IQR: 20, 37); 40% of subjects required insulin. The median CSA was 100.4 cm² (IQR: 84.0, 120.8) and muscle composition was 20.4 HU (IQR: 12.2, 29.4). Patients received only 36% of estimated calorie requirements. Insulin administration, history of diabetes, and muscle composition were significant BGV predictors. Among these adult intubated ICU patients, higher muscle composition was associated with lower BGV. Future research is needed to corroborate these findings, determine other factors associated with poor muscle quality, and identify methods to describe muscle composition for all ICU patients.
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