Most things Diabetes Flashcards
(29 cards)
- tide Drug class
GLP 1 agonists
- gliptin Drug class
DDP4 inhibitor
Inhibit DDP4 which increases incretins like GLP-1 level (not metaglised ny DDP4) Causes rise in insulin secretion + inhibition of glucagon
- glitazones
Thalizodinediones
-gliflozins Drug class
SGLT2 inhibitors
indications for HDU in HHS
Consider HDU care for those with osmolality > 350, sodium > 160, PH < 7.1, K+ abnormalities, GCS < 12, ↓ O2 sats, SBP < 90, tachy or bradycardic, evidence of significant AKI.
Intubation and ventilation required for severely unwell especially if ↓ GCS
management of HHS
-
Aggressive fluid replacement
-
0.9% NaCL + K+ as indicted by U&Es
- Swap to 0.45% NaCl if osmolality is not ↓ with adequate fluid resuscitation
- Initial ↑ in Na+ is expected, should not prompt change of fluid
- Aim for 3-6L by 12 hours depending on weight and extent of dehydration
- Aim to ↓ glucose by no more than 5mM/h and sodium by 10mM/24 hours
- Encourage oral intake as soon as safe to do so
-
0.9% NaCL + K+ as indicted by U&Es
-
IV insulin infusion
- Only required if glucose no longer falling with fluid resuscitation alone or significant ketonuria (++)
- 0.05 IU/kg/hour fixed rate
- Treat the underlying precipitate
- VTE prophylaxis
- Monitoring - serial glucose, U&E, neuro obs
Ix for HHS
-
Bedside
- Weight - guide fluid resuscitation
- GCS/AVPU
- Urine dipstick - glucose +++, ketones may be mildly ↑ (+)
- ECG
-
Bloods
- VBG - ↑ glucose, normal pH (pH > 7.3, bicarbonate > 15)
- Serum osmolality - > 320 mmol/L, normal 290 + 5
- U&Es (Na+ often ↑)
- FBC, CRP - exclude infection
- CK - screen for rhabdo
-
Specialist or scoring
- Calculate osmolarity
- assessing for infection - urine/blood MC&S, CXR
diagnostic criteria for HHS
Diagnostic criteria - patient is clinically hypovolaemic
- pH > 7.3 (no acidosis)
- Serum osmolarity > 320 mosmol/kg
- Blood glucose > 30mM
treatment of DKA
criteria for DKA
- pH < 7.3 and bicarbonate < 15
- Plasma glucose > 11mM
- Blood ketones > 3 mM or ++ in urine
what is the management of T2DM
- Advice: diet, exercise, reduce CVD risk, foot care, DVLA
-
medical
- Conservative – diet and exercise advice, weight loss
-
Metformin - monotherapy
- r/v if eGFR < 45, stop if < 30
- CI: eGFR < 30, tissue hypoxia (MI, surgery), iodine contrast (stop 24 hrs prior → 48hrs after), alcohol abuse (relative)
-
dual therapy:
- DDP-4 inhibitor (gliptins, e.g. sitagliptin) Good if overweight
- pioglitazone (thiazolidinedione)
- sulfonylurea (glibenclamide, gliclazide)
- SGLT2 inhibitor (e.g. empagliflozin)
-
triple therapy
- can consider GLP-1 analogue if BMI > 35, or BMI < 35 with occupational consequences of insulin treatment
-
Insulin based treatment
- continue metformin for cardio + renal protection
-
medical
if metformin CI or not tolerated as 1st drug use another for mono → dual → insulin
What are the NICE targets for T2DM?
NICE targets:
- 48 mmol/mol HbA1c = diagnostic + target
- if drug associated hypoglycaemia aim for 53 mmol/mol
- If HbA1c not adequately controlled by single drug and rises to over 58 mmol/mol consider intensifying treatment and aim for < 53 mmol/mol
Meeran’s guide for T2DM medical treatment (step 1+2)
- Diet + exercise + lifestyle
- Metformin = everyone unless CI
- Step 2 → consult diabetes team for recommendation
- Guidelines have changed to say you can use anything.
- GLP-1 agonist if obese
- Expensive, currently only injectable, but new ones coming orally
- SGLT2 if ischaemic heart disease
- Very good if heart failure
- Gliclazide for everyone else/money important
- Used to be gliclazide as always second line
when can HbA1c not be used for diagnosis of DM?
Inappropriate to use HbA1c in paediatrics, ?T1DM, < 2/12 of symptoms, medications impairing glucose metabolism, significant pancreatic damage, pregnancy
what are the target BM in DM if on insulin (T1DM mainly)?
Aim for sugars of: 4-7 pre-meal, < 9 post-meal
Types of insulin regime
- Types of regimes
- Basal-bolus regime - 1st line
-
Twice daily regime - biphasic insulin given pre-breakfast and pre-evening meal
- Mixed of intermediate acting with rapid or short acting
- Pump therapy - continuous SC insulin infusion
management of T1DM
-
Conservative
- Structure education program (DAFNE course)
- Advice: reduce CVD risk, foot care advice, DVLA
-
Medical
- Aim for sugars of: 4-7 pre-meal, < 9 post-meal
- Blood sugar monitoring - 1st and last thing in the day, prior to each meals.
-
Insulin therapy
- Short acting - dose calculated using insulin unit: carbohydrate ratio
- Long-acting
- Optimise health - statins if ↑ lipids, anti-hypertensives if ↑ BP
-
Monitoring
- HbA1c every 3-6 months
- Annual review: retinopathy (annual), nephropathy, vascular disease, diabetic foot (at clinic), CVD risk factors
what is the diagnostic criteria for DM?
Symptomatic + 1 biochemical test indicating hyperglycaemia
- Fasting glucose > 7
- Oral glucose tolerance test with 75g glucose - 2hr blood sugar > 11.1
- Random glucose > 11.1
- HbA1c > 48 (> 6.5%) → only for T2DM
- Normal < 42, pre-diabetes is 42-47 (6-6.4%)
Asymptomatic + 2 biochemical tests indicating hyperglycaemia
MOA of DDP-4 inhibitors and examples
secretagon
Inhibitor DDP-4 which increases insulin secretion and decreases glucagon secretion by preventing DDP-4 breakdown of incretins (e.g. GLP-1)
- “gliptin”
- Alogliptin
- Linagliptin
- Saxagliptin
- Sitagliptin
- Vildagliptin
sulfonylurea MOA and examples
-
Insulin secretagon
- Augment insulin secretion, requires some residual beta cell function
- Bind + close ATP-sensitive channels so beta-cells depolarise opening Ca2+ channels and release of insulin granules
- May inhibit hepatic glucose production
- gliclazide
Thiazolidinodiones MOA and example
Bind to PPARs (PPAR-gamma) in adipocytes to promote adipogenesis and fatty acid take up
- “glitazones”
- Pioglitazone
Exenatide, liraglutide etc
class:
SE:
Cautions/risk:
benefit:
Exenatide, liraglutide etc
- class: glucagon-like-peptide-1 mimetic (GLP-1 analogue)
-
SE:
- GI disturbance
- Interacts with warfarin
- Common - ↓ appetite, dizzy, skin reactions
- Uncommon – drowsy, renal impairment
-
Cautions/risk:
- Exenatide + liraglutide are weekly SC injection
- CI – ketoacidosis, severe GI disease
- Caution – elderly, pancreatitis
-
benefit:
- prevents weight gain, may cause weight loss → good if BMI > 35
alogliptin, sitagliptin etc
class:
SE:
Cautions/risk:
benefit:
alogliptin, sitagliptin etc
- class: DDP-4 inhibitor
- SE: headache, constipation, dizzy, skin reaction
-
Cautions/risk:
- CI - ketoacidosis
- hypersensitivity reaction (SJS)
-
benefit:
- weight loss
- reduced CVD deaths
gliclazide etc
class:
SE:
Cautions/risk:
benefit:
gliclazide etc
- class: sulphonylurea
-
SE:
- hypoglycaemia
- weight gain
- hyponatraemia
- GI disturbance
- liver dysfunciton
- agranulocytosis (rare)
-
Cautions/risk:
- CI: high BMI, elderly, G6PD deficiency