Whipple's triad or Whipple's criteria is a medical term which refers to three conditions that are considered by physicians necessary for proving hypoglycemia as the cause of a person's symptoms. They are stated in various versions, but the essential conditions are:
- Symptoms known or likely to be caused by hypoglycemia
- A low glucose measured at the time of the symptoms
- Relief of symptoms when the glucose is raised to normal
History
The criteria date back to the 1930's, when it had been discovered that a few patients with hypoglycemic symptoms (such as shakiness,
syncope or
sweating) due to hypoglycemia could be cured by
surgery to remove an
insulinoma. However, it had also become apparent that a large proportion of people with symptoms suggestive of hypoglycemia had no need of surgery. Diagnostic testing was rudimentary: beyond a crude assay for
reducing substances as an indirect measure of blood
glucose, there was no way to measure
hormones and metabolites such as
insulin, and no
imaging procedures for internal
organs such as the
pancreas.
Allen O. Whipple was a well-known surgeon who had pioneered pancreatic surgery. In an article entitled "The surgical therapy of hyperinsulinism", in J Internat Chir 3:237-276 (1938), he proposed that no pancreatic surgery to look for an insulinoma be performed unless these criteria were met.
Current use of the triad
The use and significance of the criteria have evolved over the last century as our understanding of the many forms of hypoglycemia has increased and our
diagnostic tests and imaging procedures have improved. Whipple's criteria are no longer used to justify surgical exploration for an insulinoma, but to separate "true hypoglycemia" in which a low glucose can be demonstrated from a variety of other conditions (e.g.,
idiopathic postprandial syndrome) in which symptoms suggestive of hypoglycemia occur but low glucose levels cannot be demonstrated. The criteria are now invoked far more often by
endocrinologists than by surgeons. The reliability of the criteria for this purpose has been a subject of contention among physicians.
See also
Endocrinology