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Intensive Insulin Therapy in Critically Ill Patients

Greet Van den Berghe; Pieter Wouters; Frank Weekers; Charles Verwaest; Frans Bruyninckx; Miet Schetz; Dirk Vlasselaers; Patrick Ferdinande · New England Journal of Medicine · 2001

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BACKGROUND: Hyperglycemia and insulin resistance are common in critically ill patients, even if they have not previously had diabetes. Whether the normalization of blood glucose levels with insulin therapy improves the prognosis for such patients is not known. METHODS: We performed a prospective, randomized, controlled study involving adults admitted to our surgical intensive care unit who were receiving mechanical ventilation. On admission, patients were randomly assigned to receive intensive insulin therapy (maintenance of blood glucose at a level between 80 and 110 mg per deciliter [4.4 and 6.1 mmol per liter]) or conventional treatment (infusion of insulin only if the blood glucose level exceeded 215 mg per deciliter [11.9 mmol per liter] and maintenance of glucose at a level between 180 and 200 mg per deciliter [10.0 and 11.1 mmol per liter]). RESULTS: At 12 months, with a total of 1548 patients enrolled, intensive insulin therapy reduced mortality during intensive care from 8.0 percent with conventional treatment to 4.6 percent (P<0.04, with adjustment for sequential analyses). The benefit of intensive insulin therapy was attributable to its effect on mortality among patients who remained in the intensive care unit for more than five days (20.2 percent with conventional treatment, as compared with 10.6 percent with intensive insulin therapy, P=0.005). The greatest reduction in mortality involved deaths due to multiple-organ failure with a proven septic focus. Intensive insulin therapy also reduced overall in-hospital mortality by 34 percent, bloodstream infections by 46 percent, acute renal failure requiring dialysis or hemofiltration by 41 percent, the median number of red-cell transfusions by 50 percent, and critical-illness polyneuropathy by 44 percent, and patients receiving intensive therapy were less likely to require prolonged mechanical ventilation and intensive care. CONCLUSIONS: Intensive insulin therapy to maintain blood glucose at or below 110 mg per deciliter reduces morbidity and mortality among critically ill patients in the surgical intensive care unit.

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APA 7

Berghe, G. V. D, Wouters, P, Weekers, F, Verwaest, C, Bruyninckx, F, Schetz, M, Vlasselaers, D, & Ferdinande, P. (2001). Intensive Insulin Therapy in Critically Ill Patients. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmoa011300

MLA

Berghe, Greet Van den, et al. "Intensive Insulin Therapy in Critically Ill Patients." 2001. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmoa011300.

Chicago

Berghe, Greet Van den, Pieter Wouters, Frank Weekers, Charles Verwaest, Frans Bruyninckx, Miet Schetz, Dirk Vlasselaers, and Patrick Ferdinande. 2001. "Intensive Insulin Therapy in Critically Ill Patients.". https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmoa011300.

Harvard

Berghe, G. V. D. et al. 2001, Intensive Insulin Therapy in Critically Ill Patients, New England Journal of Medicine, available at: https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmoa011300 [Accessed 29 Jun. 2026].

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Título
Intensive Insulin Therapy in Critically Ill Patients
Autor / colaboradores
Greet Van den Berghe; Pieter Wouters; Frank Weekers; Charles Verwaest; Frans Bruyninckx; Miet Schetz; Dirk Vlasselaers; Patrick Ferdinande
Editorial
New England Journal of Medicine
Año de publicación
2001
Idioma
en

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