Covid and Diabetes: Infected People at Higher Risk of Metabolic Disorder

Patients hospitalised with Covid-19 are at a higher risk of developing diabetes, researchers have identified. Researchers have seen there is an increase in new-onset hyperglycemia, or high levels of blood sugar lasting months, in people who have been infected with the virus.

The study was published by researchers from the Boston Children's Hospital. The team assessed the health of 551 people admitted to the hospital for Covid-19 in Italy from March through May 2020, according to IANS news agency.

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About half of the patients (46 per cent), with no history of diabetes, were found to have new hyperglycemia. A follow-up showed that while most cases were resolved, about 35 per cent of the newly hyperglycemic patients remained so at least six months after the infection, said lead author of the study, Paolo Fiorina, from the Division of Nephrology at the hospital.

Diabetes
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Compared to patients with no signs of glucose abnormalities, the hyperglycemic patients also had worse clinical concerns: longer hospitalisation, worse clinical symptoms, a higher need of oxygen, a higher need of ventilation, and increased need of intensive care treatment.

Produced too much Insulin

The study was published in the journal Nature Metabolism. The team also found that hyperglycemic patients had abnormal hormonal levels.

"We discovered they were severely hyperinsulinemic; they produced too much insulin," Fiorina said.

They also had abnormal levels of pro-insulin, a precursor of insulin, and markers of impaired islet beta cell function. Islet beta cells make and secrete insulin.

"Basically, the hormonal profile suggests that the endocrine pancreatic function is abnormal in those patients with Covid-19 and it persists long after recovery," Fiorina added.

Hyperglycemic patients also had severe abnormalities in the amount of inflammatory cytokines, including IL-6 and others.

While glucometabolic abnormalities declined over time in some patients -- particularly after Covid-19 infection -- other issues like higher post-prandial (after eating) glucose levels and abnormal pancreatic hormones remained in the post-Covid period.

"This study is one of the first to show that Covid-19 has a direct effect on the pancreas," Fiorina said, adding, "It indicates that the pancreas is another target of the virus affecting not only the acute phase during hospitalisation but potentially also the long-term health of these patients."

The study pointed to the importance of evaluating pancreatic function in patients hospitalised for Covid-19 -- while in the hospital and over the long term.

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