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Title: Hormonal and metabolic responses during coronary artery bypass surgery: role of infused glucose. Author: Werb MR, Zinman B, Teasdale SJ, Goldman BS, Scully HE, Marliss EB. Journal: J Clin Endocrinol Metab; 1989 Nov; 69(5):1010-8. PubMed ID: 2677036. Abstract: Anesthesia, surgery, and hypothermia are conventionally considered the major stress factors in the metabolic and hormonal responses to cardiac surgery. We compared these responses in 14 nondiabetics during and for 24 h after coronary artery bypass surgery; 8 received cardioplegic solutions (C+), and 6 did not (C-). The mean intraoperative glucose load in C+ was 106 g compared to 32 g in C-; postoperatively both groups received 50 g. Marked hyperglycemia (31.8 +/- 4.8 mmol/L) occurred during hypothermia in C+, but dropped to 18.9 mmol/L before surgery ended and to 11.2 +/- 1.1 mmol/L by 2 h postop. In contrast, C- showed constant mild hyperglycemia of 8.3-9.8 mmol/L throughout, significantly less than C+ until 1 h postop. Insulin was suppressed by 55% only during hypothermia, peaking with rewarming in C+ at 2,849 +/- 911 vs. 639 +/- 251 pmol/L in C- (P less than 0.05); as with glycemia, values were comparable after 2 h postop. The pancreatic beta-cell thus responded to hyperglycemia during restoration of normothermia, resulting in a rapid decline in glycemia. This occurred despite elevations in antiinsulin factors in both groups; GH was 14 +/- 4 micrograms/L, cortisol was 607 +/- 38.6 nmol/L, norepinephrine was 11.5 +/- 3.7 nmol/L, epinephrine was 13,863 +/- 3,875 pmol/L, and FFA were 0.36 +/- 0.05 g/L. Early postop, a secondary rise in stress hormones occurred in both groups. Maximal cortisol values were at 4 h (1,186 +/- 140 nmol/L) and peaks of norepinephrine (6.50 +/- 1.66 nmol/L), epinephrine (7,969 +/- 3,602 pmol/L), and FFA (0.27 +/- 0.03 g/L) occurred. The only significant glucagon elevation was at 24 h (C+, 464 +/- 53 ng/L; C-, 350 +/- 241 ng/L; P less than 0.02), Thus, 1) many metabolic responses during coronary artery bypass surgery are influenced by the glucose-containing cardioplegic solution; 2) hypothermia suppresses insulin secretion, but it responds thereafter despite marked elevations of catecholamines, and is associated with decreasing glycemia despite elevated antiinsulin factors; 3) a lesser but highly significant stress response corresponds to awakening from anesthesia; and 4) glucagon plays a minor role in intraoperative hyperglycemia; the rise at 24 h is unexplained.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]