Cardiovascular Diabetology (Dec 2022)

Stress hyperglycemia ratio and in-hospital prognosis in non-surgical patients with heart failure and type 2 diabetes

  • Yiling Zhou,
  • Li Liu,
  • Hongmei Huang,
  • Nan Li,
  • Jidong He,
  • Heling Yao,
  • Xiaochi Tang,
  • Xiangyang Chen,
  • Shengzhao Zhang,
  • Qingyang Shi,
  • Furong Qu,
  • Si Wang,
  • Miye Wang,
  • Chi Shu,
  • Yuping Zeng,
  • Haoming Tian,
  • Ye Zhu,
  • Baihai Su,
  • Sheyu Li,
  • The WECODe Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-022-01728-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Highlights (a) Why did we undertake this study? Stress hyperglycemia is classic but a long-overlooked pathophysiological process and a recently validated parameter, stress hyperglycemia ratio (SHR), facilitates its estimation. (b) What is the specific question(s) we wanted to answer? Is SHR associated with the in-hospital prognosis in non-surgical patients with type 2 diabetes and heart failure? (iii) What did we find? Compared to the nadir range of SHR at 0.79 to 1.08, both high and low SHR at admission elicit elevated risks of cardiac, kidney, and infectious adverse events during hospitalization in non-surgical patients with type 2 diabetes and heart failure. (iv) What are the implications of our findings? Clinicians should understand the inconsistency between the blood glucose at admission and HbA1c indicates poor prognosis during hospitalization and warrants additional monitoring.

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