Lecture 10: Endocrinology CIS Flashcards

1
Q

GLUT-2 vs. GLUT-4

A

GLUT-2: facilitative glucose transporter located in plasma membrane of the liver, pancreatic, intestinal, kidney cells and portal/hypothalamus areas. Has low affinity and high capacity for dietary sugars.

GLUT-4: is insulin-DEPENDENT and responsible for the majority of glucose transport into muscle and adipose cells in anabolic conditions

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2
Q

How do we calculate anion gap; what does it tell us; what is normal range?

A
  • Anion Gap = Na+ - (Cl- + HCO3-)
  • Normal = 10-12 mM/L
  • Quantity of anions not balanced by cations.
  • Usually due to the negatively charged plasma proteins
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3
Q

What occurs in Diabetic Ketoacidosis; using each letter D-K-A explain

A

D: glucose >250 mg/dL

K: serum positive for ketones

A: metabolic acidosis with blood pH <7.3; serum HCO3- <15mEq/L

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4
Q

What are common labs indicative of DKA?

A
  • Hyperglycemia
  • Hyperkalemia
  • Hyponatremia
  • Low [HCO3-]
  • Decreased pH
  • High anion gap
  • Ketonuria
  • Increased plasma osmolality
  • Elevated BUN and creatinine (azotemia)
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5
Q

Which labs should be ordered to confirm diagnosis of T1DM?

A
  • C-peptide
  • β-hydroxybutyrate
  • HbA1c
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6
Q

DKA is commonly associated w/ what type of diabetes and what are the 2 most common causes?

A
  • Affilitated with T1DM
    1) Failure to take insulin (leading cause)
    2) Stressors to the system: trauma, infection (UTI and pneumonia), medications
  • Increased epinephrine blocks insulin’s actions w/ stimulation of glucagon activity
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7
Q

Which respiratory sign can be indicative of ketoacidosis?

A

Kussmaul respirations to compensate for acidosis

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8
Q

Why is their osmotic diuresis in hyperglycemia and DKA?

A
  • Increased glucose to the proximal tubule of kidney overwhelms its capacity for absorption
  • Increased osmotic pressure of renal tubular fluid
  • Decreased water reabsorption
  • Dehydration
  • Decreased excretion of ketones = ketonemia
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9
Q

What causes the metabolic acidosis in DKA?

A
  • β-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetic acid are ketones produced that are strong acids and dissociate freely in H+ ions
  • Overproduction of H+ ions overwhelms the buffering capacity of the body
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