Perioperative Glucose Metabolism
Cross-source consensus on Perioperative Glucose Metabolism from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Using 5% dextrose as drug vehicle means the study cannot fully isolate the pharmacological effect of each vasopressor from the effect of the exogenous glucose infusion. — Prophylactic norepinephrine versus phenylephrine infusion on postpartum blood glucose in women undergoing caesarean section: a randomised controlled trial protocol
- Because the dextrose vehicle is identical and administered at the same rate in both arms, any vehicle effect is standardised across groups, preserving valid between-group comparison. — Prophylactic norepinephrine versus phenylephrine infusion on postpartum blood glucose in women undergoing caesarean section: a randomised controlled trial protocol
- Observed perioperative changes in blood glucose and insulin resistance will reflect the combined effect of vasopressor plus vehicle rather than the vasopressor pharmacology alone. — Prophylactic norepinephrine versus phenylephrine infusion on postpartum blood glucose in women undergoing caesarean section: a randomised controlled trial protocol
- Perioperative stress triggers abnormal secretion of glucagon and catecholamines, predisposing patients to elevated blood glucose. — Prophylactic norepinephrine versus phenylephrine infusion on postpartum blood glucose in women undergoing caesarean section: a randomised controlled trial protocol
- Future studies using normal saline as diluent would be needed to isolate each drug's specific metabolic contribution. — Prophylactic norepinephrine versus phenylephrine infusion on postpartum blood glucose in women undergoing caesarean section: a randomised controlled trial protocol
- There is a general paucity of clinical studies on perioperative anaesthetic drug effects in pregnant women, making evidence-based management difficult. — Prophylactic norepinephrine versus phenylephrine infusion on postpartum blood glucose in women undergoing caesarean section: a randomised controlled trial protocol