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The Annals of Pharmacotherapy: Vol. 27, No. 2, pp. 161-166.
© 1993 Harvey Whitney Books Company.
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Research Articles

Inappropriate use of high-dose glyburide to treat uncontrolled type 2 diabetes mellitus

CE Rae, RC Ewing, and DD Cook

OBJECTIVE: To report a case of chronic glyburide overdose. CASE SUMMARY: A patient with noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) who had previously developed secondary failure while taking a maximal dosage of glipizide was switched to glyburide 5 mg/d. The patient initially experienced adequate glycemic control while taking glyburide, but subsequently experienced deterioration in glycemic control. This necessitated gradual increases in the dosage of glyburide until the maximum dosage of 20 mg/d was reached. Because the patient's diabetic control did not improve with this dosage of glyburide, she decided independently to increase the dosage further. She ingested an average daily dose of 37.7 mg of glyburide over the 18 days that preceded her clinic visit without experiencing any glyburide-related adverse effects. DISCUSSION: Progression of NIDDM may be responsible for the development of secondary sulfonylurea failure in NIDDM patients treated with oral sulfonylurea drugs. Consequently, these patients should be treated as patients dependent on insulin. CONCLUSIONS: NIDDM patients treated with oral sulfonylurea drugs require long-term blood glucose monitoring to detect the development of secondary sulfonylurea failure. Patients who experience secondary failure to a particular sulfonylurea drug do not appear to develop long-term blood glucose control when switched to a different oral sulfonylurea drug. These patients should be treated with insulin therapy.





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Copyright © 1993 by Harvey Whitney Books Company.