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Prediction of hyperglycemia in preterm newborn infants
Author(s) -
Mário Cícero Falcão,
José Lauro Araújo Ramos
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
revista do hospital das clínicas
Language(s) - Portuguese
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1678-9903
pISSN - 0041-8781
DOI - 10.1590/s0041-87811999000100002
Subject(s) - medicine , glycemic , gestational age , logistic regression , birth weight , glucose homeostasis , pediatrics , prospective cohort study , insulin , pregnancy , insulin resistance , biology , genetics
Many conditions are associated with hyperglycemia in preterm neonates because they are very susceptible to changes in carbohydrate homeostasis. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the occurrence of hyperglycemia in preterm infants undergoing glucose infusion during the first week of life, and to enumerate the main variables predictive of hyperglycemia. This prospective study (during 1994) included 40 preterm neonates (gestational age < 37 weeks); 511 determinations of glycemic status were made in these infants (average 12.8/infant), classified by gestational age, birth weight, glucose infusion rate and clinical status at the time of determination (based on clinical and laboratory parameters). The clinical status was classified as stable or unstable, as an indication of the stability or instability of the mechanisms governing glucose homeostasis at the time of determination of blood glucose; 59 episodes of hyperglycemia (11.5%) were identified. A case-control study was used (case = hyperglycemia; control = normoglycemia) to derive a model for predicting glycemia. The risk factors considered were gestational age (< or = 31 vs. > 31 weeks), birth weight (< or = 1500 vs. > 1500 g), glucose infusion rate (< or = 6 vs. > 6 mg/kg/min) and clinical status (stable vs. unstable). Multivariate analysis by logistic regression gave the following mathematical model for predicting the probability of hyperglycemia: 1/exp{-3.1437 + 0.5819(GA) + 0.9234(GIR) + 1.0978 (Clinical status)}The main predictive variables in our study, in increasing order of importance, were gestational age, glucose infusion rate and, the clinical status (stable or unstable) of the preterm newborn infant. The probability of hyperglycemia ranged from 4.1% to 36.9%.

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