Hyperglycemia during childhood diarrhea.

OBJECTIVE: To determine the cause of hyperglycemia in childhood diarrhea. METHODS: During an 8-month period, patients admitted to a diarrhea treatment center in Bangladesh had their blood glucose concentrations determined. Sixteen patients aged 2 to 10 years with hyperglycemia (blood glucose concent...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ronan, A, Azad, A, Rahman, O, Phillips, R, Bennish, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1997
Description
Summary:OBJECTIVE: To determine the cause of hyperglycemia in childhood diarrhea. METHODS: During an 8-month period, patients admitted to a diarrhea treatment center in Bangladesh had their blood glucose concentrations determined. Sixteen patients aged 2 to 10 years with hyperglycemia (blood glucose concentration >10.0 mmol/L) and 20 patients in the same age group with a normal blood glucose concentration (3.3 to 9.0 mmol/L) had blood samples obtained on admission and 4 and 24 hours later for determination of glucoregulatory hormones and gluconeogenic substrates. RESULTS: Prevalence of hyperglycemia among patients aged 2 to 10 years was 9.4%. Compared with the normoglycemic patients, hyperglycemic patients more often had severe dehydration (100% versus 10%, p <0.001), infection with Vibrio cholerae 0 1 or toxigenic Escherichia coli (94% vs 25%, p <0.001), and had similar duration of fasting (16 vs 14 hours, p = 0.677). Concentrations of epinephrine (7.15 vs 2.00 micromol/L), norepinephrine (10.35 vs 3.50 micromol/L), cortisol (1.38 vs 0.82 micromol/L), glucagon (36 vs 14 pmol/L), and C-peptide (1.22 vs 0.35 nmol/L) were all significantly (p < or = 0.014) higher in patients with hyperglycemia than in normoglycemic patients. CONCLUSIONS: The development of hyperglycemia in diarrhea is caused by a stress response to hypovolemia.