Diabetes mellitus Flashcards

1
Q

what is diabetes?

A

the inability of the body to regulate blood glucose through insulin

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2
Q

type I diabetes

A

insulin dependent
auto immune; loss of insulin producing beta cells
genetically linked
triggered environmentally

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3
Q

type II diabetes

A

non-insulin-dependent
insensitivity to insulin
lifestyle and genetics
adult onset, though becoming more prevalent in juveniles

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4
Q

gestational

A

develops during pregnancy
40% increased likelihood of developing type II later
-fetus-induces changes in metabolism

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5
Q

what percent of the population has diabetes?

A

10%

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6
Q

do more people have type I or type II?

A

type II

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7
Q

how many are type I diabetics?

A

2 million

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8
Q

when you have a spike in glucose levels what else spikes?

A

insulin

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9
Q

if you eat sucrose rich foot compared to starch rich foods what is different?

A

the level of glucose and insulin released is higher

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10
Q

what are signs of diabetes?

A
polyuria and thirst
weakness or fatigue
polyphagia(excessive hunger) and weight loss
blurred vision
peripheral neuropathy
nocturnal enuresis
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11
Q

what are some other signs of diabetes?

A

sweet smelling breath
sweet smelling urine
impaired wound-healing

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12
Q

type I key characteristics

A

insulin absent
elevated glucagon
glucose, fats, and AAs released into and
improper fatty acid metabolism
increases in ketone production and release

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13
Q

lack of insulin leads to what?

A

dysregulated metabolic state of extreme fasting and starvation

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14
Q

autoimmune targeting of beta cells drives type I how?

A
it is currently unknown
95% of cases are immune medated
5% idopathic 
strong genetic predisposition
environmental trigger
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15
Q

pathogenesis of type I diabetes

A

loss of insulin signaling
system mimicry of prolonged fasting
loss of glucose transporters on membrane
thus no glycolysis in cells leading to FA metabolism

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16
Q

adipose tissue is starved of triglycerides due to glucose not being able to enter cells. this leads to what in leptin?

A

a decrease, so you are hungry all the time leading the hyperglycemia
decrease in insulin leads to decrease in leptin

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17
Q

with insulin deficiency fatty acid oxidation is increased which leads to an increase in ketone bodies. what are the ketone bodies?

A

acetone - toxic
beta hydroxybutyrate - metabolized
acetoacetate
l

18
Q

elevated blood ketones leads to what?

A

osmotic diuresis->dehydration->reduced blood flow->coma and tachycardia

19
Q

type I diabetes requires what 3 things?

A

insulin administration
glucose monitoring
diet control

20
Q

what is the goal of insulin administration

A

maintain blood glucose between 80-140 mg/dl

21
Q

what are the two ways to give insulin?

A

injection

pump-more control over injection

22
Q

basal insulin does what?

A

maintains low-level systemic insulin

long half life

23
Q

what does bolus insulin do

A

given when food is consumed

24
Q

hypoglycemia neuroglycopenic symptoms

A
exhaustion
loss of lucidity
irritibility
blurred vision
dizziness
headache
loss of speech
coma and death
25
Q

hypoglycemia autonomic symptoms

A
increased heart rate
sweating
trembling
nausea
hunger
26
Q

causes of hypoglycemia

A

excess insulin
too much activity
insufficient food
illness

27
Q

treatment for hypoglycemia

A
immediate sugar
glucagon
test blood sugar
repeatedly test
call 911 if necessary
28
Q

hyperglycemia signs

A
headache
nausea
thirst
dry mouth
excessive urnination
ketones
blurred vision
29
Q

causes of hyperglycemia

A
high blood sugar
lack of insulin
inactivity
excess food
illness
30
Q

treatment of hyperglycemia

A

insulin
oral hypoglycemic
activity
diet

31
Q

long term diabetic complications

A
cardiovascular disease
blindness
kidney disease
neuropathy
impaired wound healing and amputation
32
Q

type II diabetes

A

progressive increase in fasting glucose due to reduced insulin sensitivity followed by a degeneration of insulin production (destroyed beta cells)

33
Q

possible mechanisms for insensitivity

A

adipokine signaling
extopic lipid storage
inflammatory signaling

34
Q

what is macrophage chemotaxis protein (MCP-1)

A

released by adipose tissue and recruit macs once they reach a certain capacity of fat

35
Q

what do macs release once they get to the adipose tissue

A

TNF alpha which releases fatty acids from adipose tissue, which makes muscles use fatty acids for energy and not glucose, thus insensitivity to glucose

36
Q

treatment for type II diabetes

A

lifestyle changes
oral hypoglycemics
insulin once beta cell masses degenerate, reversible

37
Q

what do oral hypoglycemics do? 3 things

A

increase insulin
increase insulin sensitivity
decrease carb absorption

38
Q

type II drugs to treat hyperglycemia

A

metformin
sulfonylureas
peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor agonists
alpha-glucosidase inhibitors

39
Q

what are the five ways to detect diabetes

A
urinalysis
glucose monitoring (fasting)
HGA1c
glucose tolerance test
C-peptide test
40
Q

what is the glucose tolerance test

A

known amount of glucose is given (100grams)
levels are tested at 30 min and 90-120 min
if glucose levels stay high then they may have diabetes, BUT DOES NOT TELL YOU WHICH TYPE THEY HAVE

41
Q

**what is a C-peptide test **

A

done to determine type I or type II

  • *if you have no C-peptide then you have no insulin being produced and thus you are type I
  • *if you have C-peptide then you have type II