Post-prandial hypoglycemia occurs 2-5 hours after food intake, in not only insulin-treated patients with diabetes but also other metabolic disorders. For example, postprandial hypoglycemia is an increasingly recognized late metabolic complication of bariatric surgery (also known as PBH), particularly gastric bypass. Underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood to date. Besides excessive insulin exposure, impaired counter-regulation may be a further pathophysiological feature. To test this hypothesis, we need standardized postprandial hypoglycemic clamp procedures in affected and unaffected individuals allowing to reach identical predefined postprandial hypoglycemic trajectories. Generally, in these experiments, clinical investigators manually adjust glucose infusion rate (GIR) to clamp blood glucose (BG) to a target hypoglycemic value. Nevertheless, reaching the desired target by manual adjustment may be challenging and possible glycemic undershoots when approaching hypoglycemia can be a safety concern for patients. In this study, we developed a PID algorithm to assist clinical investigators in adjusting GIR to reach the predefined trajectory and hypoglycemic target. The algorithm is developed in a manual mode to permit the clinical investigator to interfere. We test the controller in silico by simulating glucose-insulin dynamics in PBH and healthy nonsurgical individuals. Different scenarios are designed to test the robustness of the algorithm to different sources of variability and to errors, e.g. outliers in the BG measurements, sampling delays or missed measurements. The results prove that the PID algorithm is capable of accurately and safely reaching the target BG level, on both healthy and PBH subjects, with a median deviation from reference of 2.8% and 2.4% respectively.Clinical relevance- This control algorithm enables standardized, accurate and safe postprandial hypoglycemic clamps, as evidenced in silico in PBH patients and controls.

A PID Control Algorithm for a Post-Prandial Hypoglycemic Clamp Study

Pavan J.;Dalla Man C.;Del Favero S.
2021

Abstract

Post-prandial hypoglycemia occurs 2-5 hours after food intake, in not only insulin-treated patients with diabetes but also other metabolic disorders. For example, postprandial hypoglycemia is an increasingly recognized late metabolic complication of bariatric surgery (also known as PBH), particularly gastric bypass. Underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood to date. Besides excessive insulin exposure, impaired counter-regulation may be a further pathophysiological feature. To test this hypothesis, we need standardized postprandial hypoglycemic clamp procedures in affected and unaffected individuals allowing to reach identical predefined postprandial hypoglycemic trajectories. Generally, in these experiments, clinical investigators manually adjust glucose infusion rate (GIR) to clamp blood glucose (BG) to a target hypoglycemic value. Nevertheless, reaching the desired target by manual adjustment may be challenging and possible glycemic undershoots when approaching hypoglycemia can be a safety concern for patients. In this study, we developed a PID algorithm to assist clinical investigators in adjusting GIR to reach the predefined trajectory and hypoglycemic target. The algorithm is developed in a manual mode to permit the clinical investigator to interfere. We test the controller in silico by simulating glucose-insulin dynamics in PBH and healthy nonsurgical individuals. Different scenarios are designed to test the robustness of the algorithm to different sources of variability and to errors, e.g. outliers in the BG measurements, sampling delays or missed measurements. The results prove that the PID algorithm is capable of accurately and safely reaching the target BG level, on both healthy and PBH subjects, with a median deviation from reference of 2.8% and 2.4% respectively.Clinical relevance- This control algorithm enables standardized, accurate and safe postprandial hypoglycemic clamps, as evidenced in silico in PBH patients and controls.
2021
Proceedings Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc. 2021
978-1-7281-1179-7
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3414205
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