MANAGEMENT OF ENDOCRINE DISEASES

Diabetes Mellitus

Patients with diabetes mellitus are at increased risk for postoperative infections, particularly those involving the surgical site. Patients with a preoperative hemoglobin A1c < 7% have roughly half the risk for developing a postoperative infection compared with those with a hemoglobin A1c > 7%. Furthermore, diabetic patients are at increased risk for postoperative cardiac complications. The most challenging issue in diabetic patients, however, is the maintenance of glucose control during the perioperative period. The increased secretion of cortisol, epinephrine, glucagon, and growth hormone during surgery is associated with insulin resistance and hyperglycemia in diabetic patients. The goal of management is the prevention of severe hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia in the perioperative period.

The ideal postoperative blood glucose level is not known. Tighter perioperative glycemic control leads to better clinical outcomes in cardiac surgery patients. In a study of 1200 patients in a critical care unit, most of whom had undergone cardiac surgery, those randomized to strict normalization of serum glucose (80–110 mg/dL) had significantly less morbidity and a shorter length of stay in the critical care unit than patients who were treated only for serum glucose > 215 mg/dL. These results do not apply to other surgical patients, however, as a subsequent trial demonstrated increased mortality with tight control in critically ill surgical patients. The specific pharmacologic management of diabetes during the perioperative period depends on the type of diabetes (insulin-dependent or not),
the level of glycemic control, and the type and length of surgery. In general, all patients with type 1 diabetes and some with type 2 diabetes will need an intravenous insulin infusion perioperatively. In a randomized trial, basal-bolusinsulin dosing improved glycemic control and reduced postoperative complications in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, when compared with sliding scale insulin. Mild hyperglycemia was more common with basal-bolus dosing. Perioperative management of all diabetic patients requires frequent blood glucose monitoring to prevent hypoglycemia and to ensure prompt treatment of hyperglycemia. Recommendations for glycemic control in patients who generally do not need intraoperative insulin are shown in Table 3–7. Perioperative use of corticosteroids, common in neurosurgical and organ transplant procedures, increases glucose intolerance. Patients receiving corticosteroids often require additional regular insulin with meals, while their fasting glucose levels may remain relatively unchanged.

Corticosteroid Replacement

Perioperative complications (predominantly hypotension) resulting from primary or secondary adrenocortical insufficiency are rare. The common practice of administering high-dose corticosteroids during the perioperative period in patients at risk for adrenocortical insufficiency has not been rigorously studied. While definitive recommendations regarding perioperative corticosteroid therapy cannot be made, a conservative approach would be to consider any patient to be at risk for having adrenocortical insufficiency who has received either the equivalent of 20 mg of prednisone daily for 3 weeks or the equivalent of 7.5 mg of prednisone daily for 1 month within the past year. A commonly used regimen is 50–100 mg of hydrocortisone given intravenously every 8 hours beginning before induction of anesthesia and continuing for 24–48 hours. Tapering the dose is not necessary. Patients being maintained on long-term corticosteroids should also continue their usual dose throughout the perioperative period.

Thyroid Disease


Severe symptomatic hypothyroidism has been associated with several perioperative complications, including intraoperative hypotension, CHF, cardiac arrest, and death. Elective surgery should be delayed in patients with severe hypothyroidism until adequate thyroid hormone replacement can be achieved. Similarly, patients with symptomatic hyperthyroidism are at risk for perioperative thyroid storm and should not undergo elective surgery until their thyrotoxicosis is controlled. An endocrinologist should be consulted if emergency surgery is needed in such patients. Conversely, patients with asymptomatic or mild hypothyroidism generally tolerate surgery well, with only a slight increase in the incidence of intraoperative hypotension; surgery need not be delayed for the month or more required to ensure adequate thyroid hormone replacement.

No comments:

Post a Comment