Patients' knowledge of their insulin pumps and glucose control during hospitalization has not been studied. The aim was to study the determinants of glycemic control in patients using continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) in the hospital. Three groups of patients were identified: those who did not need any inpatient education and continued on CSII (gorup A), those who received education then continued on CSII (group B), and those for whom CSII was not appropriate and were treated with multiple daily insulin injections (gorup C). We compared the measures of glycemic control between the 3 groups and analyzed which variables impacted glucose control. There were 50 patients, with 51 hospital admissions, 57% males, mean age 48 ± 13 years, 86% had type 1 diabetes (T1DM). The mean DM duration was 26 ± 14 years, mean duration of CSII use was 8.7 ± 6 years, and mean HbA1c was 7.6 ± 1.4%. The mean duration of hospital stay was 5.6 ± 4.6 days. Mean blood glucose (BG) and frequency of hyperglycemia and hypoglycemic events among the 3 groups adjusted for their duration of hospital stay were not statistically different. None of the patients developed diabetic ketoacidosis while using their pump.Stepwise multivariate analysis revealed knowledge of hypoglycemia correction was the single most important predictor of mean BG (P < .001). Patients who received inpatient education performed similarly to patients who did not need inpatient education. Patients who receive inpatient education on CSII fare similar as patients who did not require inpatient education.
The E14 guidelines of the International Conference on Harmonization require that all new drugs that have systemic bioavailability be subjected to a thorough QT/QTc study to look for possible effects on cardiac repolarization. Recent publications have discussed various aspects of thorough QTc studies. The thorough QTc study is designed to detect a mean drug-induced QTc prolongation of >5 ms with an upper bound of the 95% one-sided confidence limits of >10 ms. The E14 guideline has spelled out the procedures to be followed in a thorough QT/QTc study, including choice of subjects, methods of electrocardiogram (ECG) acquisition, details of ECG analysis, and statistical analysis of the study data. Since the measurement of the QT interval is a relatively subjective assessment, the ECGs must be analyzed in a central ECG laboratory by "a few skilled readers." In order to maintain quality in ECG interpretation, the E14 guidelines have two requirements. First, as a measure of the assay sensitivity, the study must include an active control known to prolong the QTc interval. Second, a certain percentage of ECGs must be subjected to an inter- and intra-reader variability analysis; these data are submitted to the regulatory authorities along with the study results.
Adrenal incidentalomas are commonly encountered in this era of ubiquitous imaging. The attenuation of the incidentaloma measured in Hounsfield units (HU) is an important step in the work up. Attenuation less than 10 HU indicates a benign lesion in more than 98% of cases, whereas attenuation greater than 30 HU is highly suspicious for adrenocortical cancer (ACC). Adrenal hematoma is rarely suspected clinically and exhibits no specific clinical symptoms or laboratory findings. There are multiple radiological features of adrenal hemorrhage and can mimic ACC. We present a case of an adrenal mass in a patient with antiphospholipid syndrome and discuss radiological clues to differentiate adrenal hematomas from ACC and thus avoid unnecessary surgical intervention.
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