Case report
Experimental and clinical monitoring of glucose by microdialysis

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Abstract

The aim of this investigation was to assess the use of cerebral extracellular glucose as a parameter for microdialytic monitoring in neurosurgical critical care patients. Samples were collected from four patients with severe head injury and one with subarachnoid haemorrhage for periods of 4.5–67 h. Glucose and lactate were analysed in the dialysates. The ratios of glucose to lactate were calculated to partially allow for changes in microdialytic conditions over time. On-line pH was measured for up to 3 days in three patients. In experiments with spontaneous hypertensive rats we found that extracellular glucose became unmeasurable in the ischemic zone after middle cerebral artery occlusion. Similarly, in 3 patients glucose became undetectable for several hours, and glucose/lactate tended to decrease during measurement. This was accompanied by high ICP in one patient, and by a hypoxic episode in another. In the two other patients glucose/lactate ratios showed a rising trend. Findings indicate that glucose, and the glucose/lactate ratio show some correlations with clinical course and are promising parameters for cerebral monitoring and therapeutic decision making.

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