Hyperglicemia at the Admission as Predictor of Severity
Background: Diabetes Mellitus is a factor for the development of micronagiopathies, it is well known at the level of retina, renal and peripheral nervous system. However, it is important to mention that high levels of glucose have deleterious effects on the walls of the vessels, causing microangiopa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the Endocrine Society 2021-05, Vol.5 (Supplement_1), p.A343-A343 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Diabetes Mellitus is a factor for the development of micronagiopathies, it is well known at the level of retina, renal and peripheral nervous system. However, it is important to mention that high levels of glucose have deleterious effects on the walls of the vessels, causing microangiopathic damage to the lung, consequently this leads to pulmonary dysfunction. There is local oxidative stress, increased vascular permeability, producing changes in the secretion of the mucus that leads to reduced lung volumes, lung diffusion capacity, decrease bronchodilation.
Knowing this complication at the pulmonary level derived from poor control of Diabetes Mellitus, diabetic pulmonary microangiopathy represents a challenge for the COVID-19 pandemic. There is a high prevalence of diabetic patients hospitalized for COVID-19 and the complications derived from this, that is why the idea arose to carry out this review and evaluate the impact that admission glucose levels have on the clinical evolution and prognosis of these patients. Elevated serum glucose levels have deleterious effects on the walls of blood vessels, leading to microangiopathy. Such a destructive process also involves the pulmonary circulation, where it is known as diabetic pulmonary microangiopathy. This hypothesis has been confirmed in histopathological examinations of the lung parenchyma, as well as in lung function tests. However, until now there have been no clinical implications of these findings.1
Histopathological evidence of pulmonary involvement in subjects with diabetes mellitus has included thickened pulmonary capillary basal plates and alveolar epithelial plates, the latter suggesting existing pulmonary microangiopathy. Abnormal lung function has been detected in some diabetic patients. Glycosylation-induced non-enzymatic alteration of lung connective tissue is the most likely pathogenetic mechanism underlying mechanical lung dysfunction in diabetic subjects. while the most sustainable explanation for altered pulmonary microangiopathy.2
Metodos:
This short review looks at the main findings, prospective cross-sectional analytical study, in Guatemala Central America that included 319 patients with COVID 19, hospitalized with comorbidities like type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, hypertension and chronic kidney disease as medical history. These patients did not have a history of pulmonary pathology and who required a low- and high-flow oxygen device since admission, presenting moderate and sever |
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ISSN: | 2472-1972 2472-1972 |
DOI: | 10.1210/jendso/bvab048.699 |