Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Blood sugar levels linked to survival in sick newborn foals
By Hollis, A R et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2008·New Bolton Center, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Blood glucose concentrations in critically ill neonatal foals.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A group of critically ill newborn foals was studied to see how their blood sugar levels affected their chances of survival. Many of the foals had either high or low blood sugar when they were admitted to the hospital, and those with very low or very high levels were less likely to survive. The research found that foals who did not survive had lower average blood sugar at admission and showed significant fluctuations in their blood sugar levels during the first day of treatment. This suggests that managing blood sugar levels could be important for the health of sick foals, and more research is needed in this area.
Abstract
REASONS FOR PERFORMING STUDY: Critical illness is associated with hyperglycemia in humans, and a greater degree and duration of hyperglycemia is associated with nonsurvival. Hypoglycemia is also seen in critically ill humans, and is associated with nonsurvival. This might also be true in the critically ill foal. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the association of blood glucose concentrations with survival, sepsis, and the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). METHODS: Blood glucose concentrations at admission (515 foals) and 24 hours (159 foals), 36 hours (95), 48 hours (82), and 60 hours (45) after admission were analyzed. Logistic regression analyses were performed to investigate the association of glucose concentrations with survival, sepsis, a positive blood culture, or SIRS. RESULTS: 29.1% of foals had blood glucose concentrations within the reference range (76-131 mg/dL) at admission, 36.5% were hyperglycemic, and 34.4% were hypoglycaemic. Foals that did not survive to hospital discharge had lower mean blood glucose concentrations at admission, as well as higher maximum and lower minimum blood glucose concentrations in the 1st 24 hours of hospitalization, and higher blood glucose at 24 and 36 hours. Foals with blood glucose concentrations <2.8 mmol/L (50 mg/dL) or >10 mmol/L (180 mg/dL) at admission were less likely to survive. Hypoglycemia at admission was associated with sepsis, a positive blood culture, and SIRS. CONCLUSIONS AND POTENTIAL RELEVANCE: Derangements of blood glucose concentration are common in critically ill foals. Controlling blood glucose concentrations may therefore be beneficial in the critically ill neonatal foal, and this warrants further investigation.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18691362/