Risk factors and impact of postoperative hyperglycemia in nondiabetic patients after cardiac surgery: A prospective study

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Abstract

Cardiac surgery induces a significant inflammatory hypermetabolic stress response, resulting in postoperative hyperglycemia in both preoperatively diabetic and nondiabetic patients. Such postoperative hyperglycemia has been associated with adverse outcomes in surgery and postsurgical recovery. Yet, while diabetes is a known risk factor for postoperative hyperglycemia, predictors of postoperative hyperglycemia among nondiabetics in the local Southeast Asian population remain unknown.We aim to investigate the predictors and outcomes associated with hyperglycemia after cardiac surgery among nondiabetics in the local Southeast Asian population. We analyzed data from 1602 nondiabetic adult patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery, from 2008 to 2010 at the 2 main heart centers in Singapore.Nondiabetic patients who developed postoperative hyperglycemia tended to be women, older, more obese, and hypertensive. Higher body mass index (BMI), age, aortic cross-clamp time, and blood transfusion were identified as independent risk factors of postoperative hyperglycemia. Postoperative hyperglycemia was also significantly associated with postoperative cardiac arrhythmias (26.9% vs 15.0%, P

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Moorthy, V., Sim, M. A., Liu, W., Chew, S. T. H., Ti, L. K., & Kim, Y. K. (2019). Risk factors and impact of postoperative hyperglycemia in nondiabetic patients after cardiac surgery: A prospective study. Medicine (United States), 98(23). https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000015911

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