Diabetes Lecture Flashcards

1
Q

Which type of diabetes mellitus characteristically has no insulin production / patients are insulin dependent?

A

Type 1

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2
Q

Which type of diabetes mellitus characteristically has some insulin production and is treated with oral hypoglycmics and insulin?

A

Type 2

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3
Q

What is a normal non-diabetic fasting glucose range?

A

70-99

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4
Q

A hemoglobin A1C below 5% is indicative of:

A

Normal / no diabetes

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5
Q

A hemoglobin A1C of 5.7-6.4% is indicative of:

A

Prediabetes

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6
Q

A hemoglobin A1C of 6.5% or greater is indicative of:

A

Diabetes

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7
Q

Glucose lower than ___ is hypoglycemia and higher than ____ is hyperglycemia.

A

60 / 250

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8
Q

Signs of hypoglycemia:

A

Nervousness, tremors, cold/clammy, diaphoretic, confusion/slurred speech, seizures/coma, death

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9
Q

Signs of hyperglycemia:

A

Thirsty, polyuria, fruity breath, kussmauls breathing, rapid pulse, dry mucous membranes

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10
Q

What’s an easy way to remember the difference between hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia?

A

Cold and clammy, need some candy
High and dry, sugar’s high

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11
Q

When is less insulin required?

A

With exercise

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12
Q

When is more insulin required?

A

Fever, infection, illness or stress

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13
Q

What are the onset, peak and duration of RAPID acting insulin?

A

10-30 / 30-90 / 1.5-5

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14
Q

What are the onset, peak and duration of SHORT acting insulin?

A

30 / 1.5-3.5 / 4-12

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15
Q

What are the onset, peak and duration of INTERMEDIATE acting insulin?

A

1.5 / 4-12 / 14-24

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16
Q

What are the onset, peak and duration of LONG acting insulin?

A

1-2 / 0-12 / 24-42

17
Q

Which insulins are clear / cloudy?

A

Rapid and short are clear. Intermediate is cloudy. Long-acting could be clear or cloudy.

18
Q

RAPID insulin is AKA ____ and is given ___.

A

Lispro, humalog, insulin aspart. Given with meals

19
Q

SHORT ACTING insulin is AKA ____ and is given ___.

A

Regular insulin, humulin R, novolin R. Given 30-60 mins before meals.

20
Q

INTERMEDIATE ACTING insulin is AKA ____.

A

Insulin isophane, NPH, humulin N, novolin N.

21
Q

LONG-ACTING insulin is AKA ____ and is given ___.

A

Insulin glargine, lantus (no peak) or insulin detemir (peak: 6-8 hrs). Normally given at bedtime.

22
Q

Name combination insulins (3)

A

Humulin 70/30
Insulin Isophane NPH 50/50
Humalog 75/25

23
Q

4 medications that interact with insulin by INCREASING glucose

A

Thiazide diuretics, glucocorticoids, thyroid agents, estrogens

24
Q

4 medications that interact with insulin by DECREASING glucose

A

Tricyclic antidepressants, MAOIs, aspirin products, oral anticoagulants

25
Q

How should you mix regular and NPH insulin?

A

Regular (clear) then intermediate (cloudy)

26
Q

What is the only oral medication that can be used for both types of DM?

A

Pramlintide

27
Q

Which oral diabetic meds are contraindicated in class 3 and 4 heart failure due to dose-related fluid retention?

A

Thiazolinediones