World Journal of Clinical Cases, volume 13, issue 8

Transient extreme insulin resistance in a critically ill patient: A case report

Xiu-Yu Wei
Hsiu-Nien Shen
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-03-16
wos Q3
SJR
CiteScore
Impact factor1
ISSN23078960
Abstract

BACKGROUND

Acute hyperglycemia due to insulin resistance is common in critically ill patients, typically managed with insulin infusion. However, the occurrence of transient extreme insulin resistance (EIR) requiring exceptional high-dose insulin is rare.

CASE SUMMARY

We present the case of a 68-year-old woman with pneumonia who suffered an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, subsequently developing transient EIR following a new episode of sepsis. Remarkably, insulin resistance rapidly reversed when the insulin infusion rate peaked at 960 units/hour (a total of 18224 units on that day), and it was promptly titrated down to zero upon achieving the target glucose level.

CONCLUSION

Exceptional high-dose insulin infusion may be required in critically ill patients with stress-related EIR, which is typically transient. Clinicians should be aware of the phenomenon and cautious to avoid hypoglycemia and fluid overload during the steep titration of high-dose insulin infusion.

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