Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever

To determine whether glucose turnover is increased in acute falciparum malaria compared to enteric fever in children, steady-state 6,6-D2-glucose turnover was measured in 9 Malaysian children with uncomplicated malaria (6 males and 3 females; median age 10 years, body weight 22 kg) and in 12 with un...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Balbir, Singh, Keng, E. Choo, Jamal, Ibrahim, Johnston, Wayne, Davis, Timothy M.E.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd. 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/15856/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/15856/1/Non-radioisotopic%20glucose%20turnover%20in%20children%20%28abstract%29.pdf
_version_ 1848837940616101888
author Balbir, Singh
Keng, E. Choo
Jamal, Ibrahim
Johnston, Wayne
Davis, Timothy M.E.
author_facet Balbir, Singh
Keng, E. Choo
Jamal, Ibrahim
Johnston, Wayne
Davis, Timothy M.E.
author_sort Balbir, Singh
building UNIMAS Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description To determine whether glucose turnover is increased in acute falciparum malaria compared to enteric fever in children, steady-state 6,6-D2-glucose turnover was measured in 9 Malaysian children with uncomplicated malaria (6 males and 3 females; median age 10 years, body weight 22 kg) and in 12 with uncomplicated enteric fever (8 males and 4 females; median age 10 years, body weight 24 kg) in acute illness, after quinine (5 malaria patients) and in convalescence. Baseline plasma glucose concentrations in malaria and enteric fever were similar (all values are medians [ranges in brackets]) 5·6 [3·2–11·3] vs. 5·5 [4·2–8·0] mmol/L), as were serum insulin levels (5·6 [0·4–26·5] vs. 6·8 [1·1–22·5] milliunits/L; P > 0·4). Glucose turnover in the malaria patients was higher than in patients with enteric fever (6·27 [2·71–6·87] vs. 5·20 [4·50–6·08] mg/kg.min; P = 0·02) and in convalescence (4·74 [3·35–6·79] mg/ kg.min; P = 0·05 vs. acute malaria study), and fell after quinine together with a rise in serum insulin (P = 0·03). Basal plasma lactate concentrations were higher in enteric fever than in malaria (3·4 [1· 8–6·4] vs. 0·8 [0·3–3·8] mmol/L; P < 0·0001) and correlated inversely with glucose turnover in this group (rs = −0·60; n = 12; P = 0·02).These data suggest that glucose turnover is 20% greater in malaria than in enteric fever. This might reflect increased non-insulin-mediated glucose uptake in falciparum malaria and/ or impaired gluconeogenesis in enteric fever, and may have implications for metabolic complications and their clinical management in both infections.
first_indexed 2025-11-15T06:47:39Z
format Article
id unimas-15856
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-15T06:47:39Z
publishDate 1998
publisher Elsevier Ltd.
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling unimas-158562017-04-07T02:18:01Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/15856/ Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever Balbir, Singh Keng, E. Choo Jamal, Ibrahim Johnston, Wayne Davis, Timothy M.E. R Medicine (General) To determine whether glucose turnover is increased in acute falciparum malaria compared to enteric fever in children, steady-state 6,6-D2-glucose turnover was measured in 9 Malaysian children with uncomplicated malaria (6 males and 3 females; median age 10 years, body weight 22 kg) and in 12 with uncomplicated enteric fever (8 males and 4 females; median age 10 years, body weight 24 kg) in acute illness, after quinine (5 malaria patients) and in convalescence. Baseline plasma glucose concentrations in malaria and enteric fever were similar (all values are medians [ranges in brackets]) 5·6 [3·2–11·3] vs. 5·5 [4·2–8·0] mmol/L), as were serum insulin levels (5·6 [0·4–26·5] vs. 6·8 [1·1–22·5] milliunits/L; P > 0·4). Glucose turnover in the malaria patients was higher than in patients with enteric fever (6·27 [2·71–6·87] vs. 5·20 [4·50–6·08] mg/kg.min; P = 0·02) and in convalescence (4·74 [3·35–6·79] mg/ kg.min; P = 0·05 vs. acute malaria study), and fell after quinine together with a rise in serum insulin (P = 0·03). Basal plasma lactate concentrations were higher in enteric fever than in malaria (3·4 [1· 8–6·4] vs. 0·8 [0·3–3·8] mmol/L; P < 0·0001) and correlated inversely with glucose turnover in this group (rs = −0·60; n = 12; P = 0·02).These data suggest that glucose turnover is 20% greater in malaria than in enteric fever. This might reflect increased non-insulin-mediated glucose uptake in falciparum malaria and/ or impaired gluconeogenesis in enteric fever, and may have implications for metabolic complications and their clinical management in both infections. Elsevier Ltd. 1998 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/15856/1/Non-radioisotopic%20glucose%20turnover%20in%20children%20%28abstract%29.pdf Balbir, Singh and Keng, E. Choo and Jamal, Ibrahim and Johnston, Wayne and Davis, Timothy M.E. (1998) Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 92 (5). pp. 532-537. ISSN 0035-9203 http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0035920398909038 https://doi.org/10.1016/S0035-9203(98)90903-8
spellingShingle R Medicine (General)
Balbir, Singh
Keng, E. Choo
Jamal, Ibrahim
Johnston, Wayne
Davis, Timothy M.E.
Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever
title Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever
title_full Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever
title_fullStr Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever
title_full_unstemmed Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever
title_short Non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever
title_sort non-radioisotopic glucose turnover in children with falciparum malaria and enteric fever
topic R Medicine (General)
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/15856/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/15856/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/15856/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/15856/1/Non-radioisotopic%20glucose%20turnover%20in%20children%20%28abstract%29.pdf