Antidiabetics Flashcards

1
Q

MOA: Stimulate pancreatic insulin secretion by blocking ATP-dependent K+ channels in pancreatic beta-cell membranes and opening of voltage-gated Ca+ channels. The increase in intracellular Ca+ concentration stimulates insulin secretion (though only works in people with residual pancreatic function)

A

Sulfonylurea (Gliclazide)

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2
Q

Indication: can be used to lower blood glucose in combination with Metformin, or as monotherapy where Metformin is contraindicated or not tolerated

A

Sulfonylurea (Gliclazide)

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3
Q

Potentially serious side effect of Gliclazide?

A

Hypoglycaemia
More likely in high doses, or when used in combination with other glucose-lowering drugs, or when patient is acutely unwell (d/t impairment of renal and hepatic function)

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4
Q

First line DOC for control of blood glucose in DM2?

A

Metformin

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5
Q

MOA: Reduces hepatic glucose output (reduces gluconeogenosis and glycogenolysis). Increases uptake and utilisation of glucose by skeletal muscle via activation of AMP kinase. Opposes action of glucagon

A

Metformin (Biguanide)

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6
Q

Common are rare (but important) side effects of Metformin?

A

Common: GI upset- N/V, taste disturbance, diarrhoea.
Rare, but important: Lactic acidosis

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7
Q

In what instances should Metformin be witheld?

A

AKI and eGFR <30
Sepsis and severe tissue hypoxia
Significant acute illness

Use with caution in renal and hepatic impairment

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8
Q

Target HbA1c for type 2 diabetics?

A

48 mmol/L or less

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9
Q

How often should Hba1c levels be monitored for type 2 diabetic patients?

A

Measure HbA1c levels at 3–6 monthly intervals until the HbA1c is stable on unchanging treatment, then at 6-monthly intervals.

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10
Q

MOA: Inhibits sodium-glucose transporter in proximal (S1 segment) convoluted tubule of nephron

A

Dapagliflozin

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11
Q

Important adverse effects of Dapagliflozin? (2)

A

Increased risk of genital and urinary tract infections due to glycosuria
Risk of euglycaemic ketoacidosis

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12
Q

Warnings/contraindications for Dapagliflozin?

A

Hold duing acute illness that causes or presents a risk of volume depletion or hypotension (also use with caution in combination with BP lowering drugs and diuretics for the same reason)

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13
Q

How are GLP-1 agonists (Dulaglutide, Exenatide) administered?

A

Once weekly subcutaneous injection

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14
Q

NICE guidelines: If triple therapy with Metformin and 2 other oral drugs is not effective, consider triple therapy by switching one drug for a ___________ for adults with type 2 diabetes who:
- Have a BMI of 35 +
- or have a BMI < 35 and can’t take insulin for occupational reasons or would benefit from weight loss due to significant obesity-related comorbidities

A

GLP-1 agonist (Dulaglutide, Exenatide)

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15
Q

MOA of Linagliptin, Sitagliptin?

A

Dipeptidylpeptidase-4 (DPP4) inhibitors prevent incretin degredation, such as GLP-1, which are released from the intestine in response to food.

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16
Q

DPP4 inhibitors (Linagliptin, Sitagliptin) are generally well-tolerated (most common s/e is GI upset), but they are associated with a small risk of what condition?

A

Pancreatitis

17
Q

Contraindications for this drug class include DM1, ketoacidosis, pregnancy, and breastfeeding

A

DPP4 inhibitors (Linagliptin, Sitagliptin)

18
Q

MOA: Stimulates glucose uptake and utilisation from the circulation into tissues, including skeletal mm and fat. Activates Na+/K+-ATPase, reducing serum K+ concentrations

A

Insulin

19
Q

List these types of insulin in order of onset/duration of action:
- Insulin glargine (Lantus)
- Soluble insulin (Actrapid)
- Isophane or NPH insulin (Humulin)

A

Short acting: Actrapid (soluble insulin)

Intermediate: Humulin (Isophane or NPH insulin)

Long-acting: Lantus (insulin glargine)

20
Q

Important side effects of insulin

A

Most important is HYPOGLYCAEMIA. Can also cause weight gain, and lipohypertrophy of injection site