physiology of diabetes mellitus and insulin resistance Flashcards

1
Q

what is diabetes mellitus

A

inability to make insulin or inability of insulin to act properly on targets. leading to glucose in the urine

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2
Q

what are common sources of diabetes mellitus is the issue is with production of insulin

A
  • prancreatectomy
  • pancreatitis
  • auto-immunity
  • islet cell hypoplasia
  • chemical toxicity
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3
Q

what is the source of the insulin probem if the issue is with action of insulin

A
  • progesterone/agen
  • growth hormone
  • clucocoticoids
  • glucagon
  • catecholamines
  • thyroid
  • obesity
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4
Q

list causes of insulin resistance

A

physiological: pregnancy, stress
pathological: obesity, hereditary predisposition, concurrent diseases, endocrinopathies

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5
Q

what is insulin resistance

A

when the body’s cells dont respond to the insulin produced or injected

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6
Q

what are cuases of diabetes mellitus in dogs

A
  • usually a genetic susceptibility
  • immune mediated destruction of beta cells
  • pancreatitis with beta cell destruction
  • obesity-induced insulin resistance
  • insulin antagonistic disease/conditions
  • insulin antagonistic drugs
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7
Q

what hormones antagonise insulin action

A
  • cortisol
  • growth hormone
  • catecholamines
  • glucagon
  • progesterone
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8
Q

what are the most common pathogenesis for diabetes mellitus in dogs

A
  • immune mediated T cell destruction of beta calls (autoantibodies against insulin and/or beta cells = progressive decrease in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion)
  • pancreatitis with beta cell destruction (spontaneous inflammation of pancreas with associated residual damage to islets of beta cells
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9
Q

discuss causes of diabetes in cats

A
  • obesity/diet induced insulin resistance
  • islet amyloidosis
  • pancreatitis
  • insulin antagonistic drugs
  • insulin antagonistic disease
  • genetics
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10
Q

discuss the most common reasons for diabetes in cats

A
  • obesity associated via high carbohydrate diet and glucose toxicity leading to insulin resistance
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11
Q

why does obesity lead to insulin resistance

A
  • inadequate number of insulin receptors
  • defective insulin receptor structure
  • cell signalling pathway
  • defective GLUT4 transport proteins
  • problems with translocation of GLUT4 to the membrane
  • interference with the function of GLUT4
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12
Q

what is islet amyloid polypeptide and how is it related to diabetes mellitus

A
  • co-secreted with insulin by feline beta cells
  • chronis increased secretion occurs with obesity and insulin resistant states
  • may be consequence of chronic hyperglycaemia/glucose tox
  • amylin deposited in the islets as amyloid
  • amyloid fibrils are cytotoxic leading to apoptosis of islet cells leading to defective insulin seretion
  • if deposition is progressive, leads to diabetes mellitus (basically chokes islet cells)
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13
Q

discuss prevalence of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus

A
  • most common form
  • almost 100% of dogs but 50-70% of cats
  • permanent insulin deficiency
  • animals need exogenous insulin
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14
Q

what are causes of non-insulin dependent diabete mellitus in dogs and cats

A

cats: obesity induced insulin resistance (already making lots of insulin)
dogs: insulin antagonism usually by drugs or another condition

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15
Q

what is equine metabolic disorder

A
  • primary disorder is insulin resistance
  • strong link with obesity/regional adiposity
  • most common Cs is laminitis
  • see high levels of insulin and glucose
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16
Q

what are the classic clinical signs of diabetes mellitus

A
  • PU/PD
  • polyphagia
  • weight loss
17
Q

why is PU/PD a sign of diabetes mellitus

A

osmotic diuresis
- in normal blood glucose cases, the kidney reabsorbs the glucose and it doesnt enter the urine
- in hyperglycemic animal, blood glucose has exceeded renal threshold and you get glucose in the urine (insulin not able to control blood glucose levels)

18
Q

why does polyphagia result from diabetes mellitus

A
  • hypothalamic satiety centre cant sense glucose concentrations if insulin isnt there to facilitate
  • if brain doesnt sense glucose, thinks there isnt any so stimulates hunger
  • cant inhibit appetitie centre
19
Q

why is weight loss a result of diabetes mellitus

A
  • insulin:glucagon ratio falls and promotes the starvation process (continual interprandial period despite eating)
  • stores are mobilised and catabolised
  • leads to breakdown of protein stores and muscle wasting
20
Q

why do you get cataracts from diabetes mellitus

A
  • glucose is taken into the lens
  • normally, glucose is metabolised to lactate which diffuses out of lens
  • excess glucose that cant be converted to lactate is converted to fructose and sorbitol (these do not diffuse out)
  • trapped fructose and sorbitol draws water into the lens
21
Q

what occurs in ketoacidosis

A
  • glucose does not enter the cells as easily
  • when insulin/glucagon ratio favour catabolsim
  • shift to fat metabolism for energy
  • mobilize fatty acids (fat cant turn into glucose)
  • more fatty acids = ketones
  • ketones build up = metabolic acidosis
  • animals appear ill (vomiting, diarrhea, anorexia = dehydration)
22
Q

how is diabetes mellitus diagnosed

A
  • persistent fasting hyperglycemia after blood glucose curve test
  • persistent glucosuria
  • fructosamine elevated
  • increased liver enzymes
  • hypercholesterolemia
  • hypertriglyceridemia
  • visible lipid in the serum/plasma
  • high USG
  • ## ketones in urine
23
Q

how does stress impact blood glucose

A
  • stress induces cortisol and catecholamines and hyperglycemia
  • usually dont see glucosuria, but if diagnosing DM, recheck urine in non-stressed environment