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Hyperglycemia Research | See downloads for: Adobe Files |
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Endocr Pract. 2004 Jan-Feb;10(1):40-4. Related Articles, Links Severe hyperglycemia during gatifloxacin therapy in patients
without diabetes. Arce FC, Bhasin RS, Pasmantier R. Stony Brook University, SUNY at Stony Brook, New York, USA. OBJECTIVE: To present two cases of severe hyperglycemia in patients
without diabetes who received gatifloxacin therapy. METHODS: We
describe the histories, clinical findings, and hospital courses of two
women in whom severe hyperglycemia developed after gatifloxacin
therapy was initiated. Interacting factors that may result in severe
hyperglycemia in patients without diabetes and the literature
explaining the mechanism by which gatifloxacin can alter glucose
metabolism are reviewed. RESULTS: Our first patient, a 46-year-old
woman with end-stage renal disease, presented with a 3-day history of
fever, abdominal pain, and hypotension. Admission laboratory data
included a fasting plasma glucose level of 72 mg/dL and a glycosylated
hemoglobin of 5.3%. She was treated with gatifloxacin for an infected
ovarian cyst found on laparotomy. Her subsequent glucose values ranged
from 400 to 500 mg/dL and remained high during gatifloxacin therapy.
Antibiotic treatment was changed to ciprofloxacin. On outpatient
follow-up, the patient's fasting plasma glucose levels had decreased
to a range of 87 to 108 mg/dL. Our second patient, a 77-year-old woman
with a history of chronic renal failure and congestive heart failure,
was hospitalized because of dyspnea and hypotension. She was given
gatifloxacin for a urinary tract infection. Her daily fasting plasma
glucose value gradually increased from 100 mg/dL on admission to 694
mg/dL on the 6th hospital day. The patient required insulin therapy
throughout her hospitalization, and she died on the 12th hospital day.
CONCLUSION: Gatifloxacin therapy may precipitate severe hyperglycemia
in patients without diabetes, especially in the elderly population,
those with renal insufficiency, and those receiving multiple drugs
known to alter glucose metabolism. Discontinuation of gatifloxacin
treatment may result in improved glucose homeostasis. Publication Types: Case Reports PMID: 15251620 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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