1013 - Pathophysiology of Diabeetus Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between type I and type II diabetes?

A

Type I is an autoimmune disease, in which iset beta-cells are destroyed by the immune system - it is a disease of insulin deficiency.
Type II develops in insulin-resistant subjects when beta-cell compensation fails. It is therefore related to defects in both insulin action (resistance) and insulin secretion (compensation fails).

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2
Q

What are the two pathways that lead to diabetic ketoacidosis?

A

Glucose and Lipids (both due to insulin lack)
Glucose - increased gluconeogenesis and decreased cell up take leads to hyperglycaemia, glycosuria, thus osmotic diuresis and dehydration.
Lipids - Decreased insulin leads to increased lipolysis, and therefore increased ketogenesis via beta-oxidation. This leads to Ketonaemia and ketonuria (therefore more osmotic diuresis and dehydration). Ketonaemia leads to metabolic acidosis, body tries to compensate via tachypnoea. Ketones also lead to vomiting.

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3
Q

What tests would you do with suspected DKA? Why?

A

Vitals - Low BP (shock/dehydration?) Tachycardia (hypovolaemia), tachypnoea (metabolic acidosis).
Urine - check for glucose and ketones
Blood glucose
UECs - Na, K, and HCO3- will well be out of whack. Creatinine may be high due to dehydration.
FBC (confirm acidosis)
LFT (liver disease as cause?)

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4
Q

What can trigger DKA? What is mortality rate?

A

Mortality 3-5%

Triggers - infection, MI/Trauma/Stress, New-onset T1DM, or insulin omission/non-compliance.

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5
Q

What happens to sodium in DKA? Why?

A

Often hyponatraemia - diluted due to osmotic water movement out of cells, and urinated out due to diuresis.

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6
Q

What happens to creatinine in DKA? Why?

A

Raised (pre-renal) due to dehydration.

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7
Q

What happens to potassium in DKA? Why?

A

Could go either way, but most commonly SERUM potassium will be hyperkalaemic, despite whole-body K+ deficit.
Hyperkalaemia due to H+/K+ exchanger, and non-effect of insulin promoting co-transport of K+ into cells with glucose.
Whole-body deficit due to urinary and GI losses (diuresis and vomiting/diarrhoea).

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8
Q

How do you treat DKA?

A

IV infusion of Actrapid to reintroduce insulin
IV Saline to replace fluids
Monitor and correct electrolyte imbalance SLOWLY - particularly K+
Aim is to investigate and treat the underlying cause rather than just the symptoms.

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9
Q

What causes hyperglycaemia in T2DM? (4)

A

Decreased incretin effect means insulin is not stimulated, and hepatic glucose production increases due to hepatic insulin resistance.
Impaired glucose tolerance in peripheral tissues - they are not taking up the glucose because of insulin resistance.
Impaired beta-cell compensation for insulin resistance (including by reduced beta-cell volume and increased apoptosis) - insulin secretion defect.
Kidney keeps reabsorbing it until maxed out - not excreting.

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10
Q

How can T1DM and T2DM be distinguished if you are unsure?

A

Measure insulin and islet autoantibodies - presence of insulin suggests T2DM, presence of islet autoantibodies confirms T1DM.

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11
Q

What are the three types of Diabetes Mellitus?

A

Type 1 - Immune-mediated
Type 2 - Insulin-resistant
Gestational

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12
Q

Briefly outline gestational diabetes

A

Impaired carb tolerance in mother - hyperglycaemia crosses the placenta, leading to hyperinsulinaemia in foetus and excessive foetal growth.

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