Critical Care

official impact factor 4.60

Commentary

Is insulin an endogenous cardioprotector?

Undurti N Das

Author Affiliations

Chairman and Research Director, EFA Sciences LLC, Norwood, Massachusetts, USA

Critical Care 2002, 6:389-393 doi:10.1186/cc1535

Published: 31 July 2002

Abstract

Stress hyperglycemia and diabetes mellitus with myocardial infarction are associated with increased risk for in-hospital mortality, congestive heart failure, or cardiogenic shock. Hyperglycemia triggers free radical generation and suppresses endothelial nitric oxide generation, and thus initiates and perpetuates inflammation. Conversely, insulin suppresses production of tumor necrosis factor-α and free radicals, enhances endothelial nitric oxide generation, and improves myocardial function. It is proposed that the balance between insulin and plasma glucose levels is critical to recovery and/or complications that occur following acute myocardial infarction and in the critically ill. Adequate attention should be given to maintaining euglycemia (plasma glucose ≤ 110 mg/dl) in order to reduce infarct size and improve cardiac function while using a glucose–insulin–potassium cocktail.

Keywords:
cardiac failure; cardioprotection; diabetes; free radicals; glucose; hyperglycemia; insulin; nitric oxide; tumor necrosis factor; septicemia; septic shock