Diabetes overview Flashcards

1
Q

Define diabetes mellitus and describe why it is an important disease

A

A chronic condition characterized by elevated blood glucose (hyperglycemia). due to an absolute or relative deficiency of insulin. associated with microvascular (and macrovascular) complications

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2
Q

Classic symptoms of diabetes

A

Polydipsia (drinking), polyuria, glycosuria, weight loss. High ketone levels (too much fatty acid conversion to acetyl CoA).

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3
Q

Which is increasing more, Type 1 or type 2?

A

Both going up. Possibly do to epigenetics or environment

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4
Q

understand and describe the anatomy of the pancreas, both exocrine and endocrine.

A

Derived from endoderm, two buds form and come together. In retroperitoneal space. Head (secretes), neck, body, tail (more distal).

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5
Q

Islet types

A

ß cells (insulin); a cells (glucagon); d cells (somatostatin); pp-cells (pancreatic polypeptide - fn unclear). Arranged in decreasing abundance

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6
Q

Glucose metabolism overview

A

Enter via transporter protein, phosphorylated (cannot exit), glycolysis (2 pyruvate and 2 ATP - anaerobic), Krebs cycle (34 ATP - aerobic). Acetyl CoA is intermediate, can come from aa or fatty acid. Energy from krebs cycle works electron transport chain. Gluconeogenesis - can be formed from protein or lipids (glycerol can become glucose, fa can become acetyl CoA). Glycogen - storage; break down from phosphorylase (insulin) and made by glycogen synthase (glucagon).

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7
Q

describe the mechanisms responsible for the production of insulin at the level of the cell and the whole organism.

A

Insulin gene transcript (pre-pro-insulin), cut to proinsulin, then to one insulin and one C peptide (measure how much is being produced despite injections). Preproinsulin is a long chain with di-sulfide bridges. Occurs in granules in ß cells.

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8
Q

Secretion of insulin

A

Glucose enters, higher ATP closes K channel, depolarize membrane, Ca pore opens, causes insulin vesicles to export

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9
Q

What else can stimulate insulin secretion?

A

Parasympathetic stimulation, GI hormones, high aa levels. Sympathetic stimulation is inhibitory

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10
Q

Transport of insulin from pancreas

A

Goes to liver via HPV (primary target - most removed by first pass metabolism), then to insulin sensitive tissues: liver, adipose, muscle

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11
Q

Effect of insulin on liver

A

stimulates hexokinase (G —> G6P), increase glycogen and fatty acid synthesis, increase glucose storage; decrease gluconeogenesis, glycogenolysis, hepatic glucose production

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12
Q

Effect of insulin on muscle

A

Increased glucose uptake (via GLUT-4), increase glycogen synthesis, protein synthesis, amino acid uptake, glucose storage and protein metabolism; decrease glycogenolysis

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13
Q

Effect of insulin on fat

A

increased glucose uptake (via GLUT-4), increase glycerol synthesis, esterification (triglyceride synthesis); decreased lipolysis (hormone sensitive lipase) and non-esterified fatty acids

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14
Q

Glucagon actions

A

On glucose: lower glycogen synthesis, higher gluconeogenesis, glycogenolysis; Lipid: higher lipolysis, lower lipogenesis; Protein: more degradation (minor)

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15
Q

describe the mechanisms of insulin action and the effects of insulin on cellular function and metabolism.

A

Insulin is anabolic. Regulates protein and fat stores. Binds to insulinR, also IGFR (insulin-like GF). Affect cell growth and division; protein, lipid and glucose

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16
Q

Mothers that have gestational diabetes often have premature babies or C sections. Why?

A

Child exposed to high glucose will secrete more insulin, and insulin is a growth factor so they get big!