Abstract

Though normoglycaemia is thought to indicate adequacy of cellular glucose content, ketoacidosis occurs in viral infections even in the presence of normo- and hyperglycaemia. These wide variations in glucose concentrations may reflect the patients' adaptive abilities in situations where glucose transport is impaired by viruses. Hypoglycaemia would suggest poor adaptation and hyperglycaemia good adaptation. Increased free fatty acid (FFA) concentrations and enzyme activity are probable adaptive mechanisms. If so, they should decrease with hyperglycaemia-producing infusions. Profiles of glucose, FFA, enzymes, and fever over 19 days in 24 children with viral infections are reported. On admission 87.5% were normo- or hyperglycaemic with increased FFA, AST, LDH, and fever (P less than 0.005) when compared with values 19 days later. With infusions that produced hyperglycaemia, there was clinical recovery with a decrease in FFA and enzyme activity. The hyperglycaemia observed in 56.5% therefore points to glucose homeostatic mechanisms being geared to maintain the intracellular milieu. Hence normoglycaemia does not always indicate cellular glucose adequacy.

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