We report the case of a 3-year-old girl admitted to her town emergency department for fever (39 degrees C) associated with diarrhea, generalized edema, oliguria, and drowsiness. The blood test revealed metabolic acidosis, leucocytosis, increased inflammatory markers, anemia, thrombocytopenia, and acute kidney failure. Based on the diagnosis of hemolytic-uremic syndrome, the patient was referred to a third-level children hospital. Assisted ventilation, hemodialysis, and parenteral nutrition were instituted. The blood glucose levels increased above 200 mg/dl with peaks at 500 mg/dl. Islet auto-antibodies were negative and C-peptide was undetectable, thus ruling out the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes. Multiple-daily-injection insulin therapy was then instituted with the following regimen: Detemir 2 U once daily and Aspart 0.5 U if blood glucose >200 mg/dl. Despite the very low insulin dosage, the patient experienced frequent and severe hypoglycemic events during the following 24 h and was therefore switched to sensor-augmented pump therapy. Optimal glucose control was achieved without further hypoglycemic episodes. Moreover, thanks to the possibility to customize insulin therapy hour by hour during the day and the use of a pre-low glucose suspend system, glucose control was maintained even despite the continuous modifications in the nutritional scheme due to the multiple complications that arose during hospitalization. This rare case of post-hemolytic-uremic syndrome diabetes, treated with sensor-augmented therapy from its outbreak, suggests for the first time the potential of this therapeutic strategy in achieving glucose control without significant hypoglycemic episodes in children with secondary forms of diabetes associated with very low insulin requirement.

Glucose Control in Post-hemolytic-Uremic Syndrome Diabetes: A New Approach Offered by Sensor-Augmented Pump Therapy / V. Grancini, F.A. Vianello, S. Colosimo, A. Gaglio, V. Resi, M. Arosio, G. Ardissino, G. Montini, E. Orsi. - In: FRONTIERS IN PEDIATRICS. - ISSN 2296-2360. - 10:(2022 May 30), pp. 882319.1-882319.5. [10.3389/fped.2022.882319]

Glucose Control in Post-hemolytic-Uremic Syndrome Diabetes: A New Approach Offered by Sensor-Augmented Pump Therapy

S. Colosimo;M. Arosio;G. Montini
Penultimo
;
2022

Abstract

We report the case of a 3-year-old girl admitted to her town emergency department for fever (39 degrees C) associated with diarrhea, generalized edema, oliguria, and drowsiness. The blood test revealed metabolic acidosis, leucocytosis, increased inflammatory markers, anemia, thrombocytopenia, and acute kidney failure. Based on the diagnosis of hemolytic-uremic syndrome, the patient was referred to a third-level children hospital. Assisted ventilation, hemodialysis, and parenteral nutrition were instituted. The blood glucose levels increased above 200 mg/dl with peaks at 500 mg/dl. Islet auto-antibodies were negative and C-peptide was undetectable, thus ruling out the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes. Multiple-daily-injection insulin therapy was then instituted with the following regimen: Detemir 2 U once daily and Aspart 0.5 U if blood glucose >200 mg/dl. Despite the very low insulin dosage, the patient experienced frequent and severe hypoglycemic events during the following 24 h and was therefore switched to sensor-augmented pump therapy. Optimal glucose control was achieved without further hypoglycemic episodes. Moreover, thanks to the possibility to customize insulin therapy hour by hour during the day and the use of a pre-low glucose suspend system, glucose control was maintained even despite the continuous modifications in the nutritional scheme due to the multiple complications that arose during hospitalization. This rare case of post-hemolytic-uremic syndrome diabetes, treated with sensor-augmented therapy from its outbreak, suggests for the first time the potential of this therapeutic strategy in achieving glucose control without significant hypoglycemic episodes in children with secondary forms of diabetes associated with very low insulin requirement.
SAP therapy; continuous glucose monitoring; diabetes; hemolytic-uremic syndrome; insulin; insulin pump therapy
Settore MED/13 - Endocrinologia
Settore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale e Specialistica
30-mag-2022
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
GRANCINI fped-10-882319.pdf

accesso aperto

Descrizione: Case Report
Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 811.31 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
811.31 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/975896
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 0
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact