- Steroid diabetes
Steroid diabetes is a medical term referring to prolonged
hyperglycemia due toglucocorticoid therapy for another medical condition. It is usually, but not always, a transient condition.The most common glucocorticoids which cause steroid diabetes are
prednisone anddexamethasone given systemically in "pharmacologic doses" for days or weeks. Typical medical conditions in which steroid diabetes arises during high-dose glucocorticoid treatment include severeasthma ,organ transplant ation,cystic fibrosis ,inflammatory bowel disease , and inductionchemotherapy forleukemia or othercancer s.Glucocorticoids oppose
insulin action and stimulategluconeogenesis , especially in theliver , resulting in a net increase in hepatic glucose output. Most people can produce enough extra insulin to compensate for this effect and maintain normal glucose levels, but those who cannot develop steroid diabetes.The diagnostic criteria for steroid diabetes are those of diabetes (fasting glucoses persistently above 125 mg/dl (7 mM) or random levels above 200 mg/dl (11 mM)) occurring in the context of high-dose glucocorticoid therapy.
Insulin levels are usually detectable, and sometimes elevated, but inadequate to control the glucose. In extreme cases the hyperglycemia may be severe enough to causenonketotic hyperosmolar coma .Treatment depends on the severity of the hyperglycemia and the estimated duration of the steroid treatment. Mild hyperglycemia in an immunocompetent patient may not require treatment if the steroids will be discontinued in a week or two. Moderate hyperglycemia carries an increased risk of infection, especially fungal, and especially in people with other risk factors such as immunocompromise or central intravenous lines.
Insulin is the most common treatment.Steroid diabetes must be distinguished from
stress hyperglycemia , hyperglycemia due to excessive intravenous glucose, or new-onset diabetes of another type. Because it is not unusual for steroid treatment to precipitate type 1 ortype 2 diabetes in a person who is already in the process of developing it, it is not always possible to determine whether apparent steroid diabetes will be permanent or will go away when the steroids are finished. More commonly undiagnosed cases of type 2 diabetes are brought to clinical attention with corticosteroid treatment because subclinical hyperglycemia worsens and becomes symptomatic. Generally, steroid diabetes without preexisting type 2 diabetes will resolve upon termination of corticosteroid administration.Steroid diabetes does not occur with other
steroid hormone s, such asanabolic steroid s,mineralocorticoid , orsex steroid s because these other categories of steroids have little effect on glucose metabolism.
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