Diabetes Flashcards

1
Q

Type 1 diabetes is

A

a progressive metabolic disorder of catastrophic beta cell failure with normal tissue insulin sensitivity
Immune mediated

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2
Q

Type 2 diabetes is

A

a progressive metabolic disorder of beta cell dysfunction and/or insulin resistance where fasting gluscose is > 7mmol/L

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3
Q

What defines metabolic syndrome?

A
Waist >102cm
BP> 130/85
TG>1.7mmol/l
Glucose>6mmol/L
HDL
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4
Q

Actions of insulin

A
Anabolic hormone
Increased glycogenesis and glucose uptake
Decreased hepatic gluconeogenesis
TG synthesis and protein synthesis
Decreased ketones
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5
Q

What is hormone sensitive lipase activated by?

A

Starvation
Low glucose
Low insulin
Therefore lipolysis can occur

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6
Q

Signs and symptoms of DKA

A
High blood glucose (>15mmol/L)
Ketones in blood/urine
Diuresis
Thirst
Tired/lethargy
Blurry vision
Nausea and vomiting
Deep sighing breaths
Smell of ketones on breath
Collapse/unconciousness
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7
Q

Why does ketone synthesis occur in DKA?

A

Low glucose in cells, low insulin -> lipolysis
NEFA from lipolysis enter carnitine shuffle
Not enough insulin for acetyl coA for fatty acid synthesis (acetyl-coA carboxylase doesn’t work) to occur so instead ketones are made

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8
Q

Name the 3 ketones

A

Acetone, acetoacetate and 3-hydroxybutyrate

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9
Q

Why does glucose build up in the blood in DKA?

A

Glucose can’t enter cells because of lack of insulin

Oxaloacetate can’t be used in FA synthesis so is used in hepatic gluconeogenesis

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10
Q

Treatment of DKA?

A

Resuscitation (0.9% IV saline)
Insulin (0.1units/kg/hr IV)
Potassium IV

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11
Q

What % of diabetic patients develop foot ulcers?

A

15%

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12
Q

Why does retinopathy occur in diabetes?

A

Microvascular disease -> increased vascular permeability and haemorrhage
Inflammatory changes and angiogenesis
Osmotic effects and cell damage
Plaques, exudate, haemorrhage
Ischaemic changes, proliferative retinopathy

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13
Q

Erectile dysfunction affects up to:

A

50% of men with chronic diabetes

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14
Q

3 pathophysiology pathways?

A

Glycosylation of proteins
Polyol pathway
Protein kinase C activation

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15
Q

Explain the glycosilation of proteins pathophys?

A

Glycation-> abnormal function
Glycated collagen-> LDL trapped in arterial walls
Glycated cell surface receptors-> activation of inflammatory cells and cytokine release

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16
Q

Explain the polyol pathway

A

Raised intracellular glucose conc

  • > sorbitol and fructose
  • > cellular swelling
  • > impaired protein/ion pump function
  • > pro-inflam cytokine production
  • > damage to cells
17
Q

Explain the protein kinase C activation

A

Hyperglycaemia

  • > PKC activation
  • > intracellular signal transduction pathway
  • > VEGF -> new vessels
  • > pro inflam cytokines
  • > endothelin-1, lowered NO -> vasoconstriction
18
Q

2 main types on insulin regimen

A
Premixed insulin 1/2/3 times per day
Basal bolus (long acting at bedtime, soluble/rapid at meals)
19
Q

What proportion of inpatients have diabetes?

A

10-15%

20
Q

When a diabetic patient is unwell, what happens?

A

Stress of illness increases need for insulin due to catabolic hormone action
Never withhold insulin in a type 1 diabetic!
IV insulin + glucose may be needed if pt not eating

21
Q

Primary treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus

A
Lose weight & achieve healthy BMI
Decrease fat intake, esp sat
Decrease sugar intake
Eat food with low GI, slower absorption
Increase wholegrains, veg and fibre
150mins moderate exercise/week
Smoking cessation
22
Q

What is the aim for blood sugar levels in critically ill/elderly patients?

A

6-12

Avoid risk of hypos

23
Q

Main complications of diabetes?

A
Kidneys
Retina
UTI
Hypos/hypers
Feet
Macrovascular
24
Q

Why hyperglycaemic?

A
Missed oral hypoglycaemic dose?
Are doses sub-optimal?
Insulin device failure?
New diagnosis of diabetes?
Stress of infection/illness?
Steroid treament?
Vomiting/new pancreatic disease?
25
Q

Features of hypoglycaemia

A
Sweating, palpitations
Hunger, shaking
Confusion, drowsiness
Odd behaviour
Speech difficulty
Headache, nausea
26
Q

Causes of hypoglycaemia?

A
Missed meal?
Less snacks?
NBM/nausea/vomiting?
Gastric surgery
Terminal illness
Steroids acutely stopped
Incorrect dose of insulin
IV insulin without glucose
Renal failure/hepatic dysfunction
Insulin out of date?