Diabetes (microvascular & macrovascular complications) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the microvascular complications of diabetes?

A

Microvascular disease, unlike macrovascular disease is specific to diabetes.

  • Small vessels of the retina, glomeruli and nere sheaths are particuarly affected
  • Symptoms manifest 10-20 years after diagnosis in young patients

Diabetic eye disease - Most common cause of blindness in under 65s

Diabetic Retinopathy (DR) - can be non-prolifertive (NPDR) or proliferative (PDR)

Diabetic malculopathy - retinopathy that affects the macula

Cataract formation - clouding of the lens in the eye which leads to a decrease in vision

Glaucoma - optic nerve damaged

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2
Q

Describe what diabetic retinopathy is in more detail?

Types?

A

It can be non-proliferative (NPDR) or proliferative (PDR)

Non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR)

  • ​Usually asymptomatic, and always occurs at some severity after 8-10y of DM
  • Features on fundoscopy;
    • Micro-aneurysms
    • Exudates: due to leaky vasculature
    • Haemorrhages: dot, blot, flame shaped
    • Cotton wool spots (>5 indicates ‘pre-proliferative’ retinopathy)
  • Can progress into proliferative diabetic retinopathy

Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) -more common in T2DM

  • Characterised by the development of new vessels on the optic disc or retina as a response to significant retinal ischaemia (ischaemia leads to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEFG) production)
  • The vessels are fragile, and likely to bleed with the traction that occurs when they are growing forward to give a pre-retinal or vitreous haemorrhage
  • If untreated, the blood vessels will cause fibrosis and a tractional retinal detachment, again leading to loss of acuity
  • They can also cause acute angle closure glaucoma due to iris neovascularisation, known as rubeosis iridis
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3
Q

Describe diabetic maculopathy is more detail

How does it present?

Types?

A
  • More common in type II diabetes
  • Maculopathy is damage to the macula, the part of the eye which provides us with our central vision. A common from of damage is from diabetic macular oedema (DMO) in which fluid builds up on the macula.
  • Typically presents with as blurring of vision
  • 3 subtypes: focal, diffuse and ischemic
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4
Q

What is cataracts?

Symptoms?

Is it more likely in diabetics?

A

A cataract is a clouding of the lens in the eye which leads to a decrease in vision

  • Symptoms are trouble with bright light/headlights and reading vision
  • Increased rates of age-related cataracts in diabetics
    • Postior sub-capsular cataracts are the most common
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5
Q

List the neurological complications of diabetes mellitus

A
  • Symmetrical polyneuropathy
  • Acute painful neuropathy
  • Mononeuropathy
  • Diabetic amyotrophy
  • Autonomic neuropathy
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6
Q

What is symmetrical polyneuropathy?

A
  • ‘Glove and stocking’ sensory loss, with vibration, deep pain and temperature lost first
  • Patients complain of losing their balance when eye are closed, e.g. when washing their face, due to proprioception (walking on cotton walk feeling is common)
  • Interosseous wasting of the small muscle of the feet results in a charactistic foot shape, and abnormal pressure areas lead to ulcers
  • Unrecognised trauma with poor wound healing may also lead to ulcers
  • Neuropathic arthropathy can also develop -Charcot’s foot - progressive degeneration of a weight bearing joint, a process marked by bony destruction, bone resorption, and eventual deformity
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7
Q

What is acute painful neuropathy?

A
  • Painful burning pains in the feet, shins and anterior thighs
  • Associated with poor glycaemic control
  • Typically worse at night (pressure from bedclothes may be intolerable)
  • Usually remits after 3-12 months of good glycaemic control
  • More chronic forms may be resistant to all forms of therapy
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8
Q

What is mononeuropathy?

What types of mononeuropathy may occur in diabetes?

What is mononeurtis complex?

A
  • Type of damage to nerves outside the brain and spinal cord

Commonest types of mononeuropathy that may occur in diabetes:

  • Cranial nerve lesions can occur in patients with diabetes
    • Mainly CNs III, IV and VI; ocular palsies
  • Isolated peripheral nerve lesions can also occur
    • Any nerve compression syndrome is more common in diabetes, e.g. carpal tunnel syndrome
    • Foot drop may occur due to lesions of the sciatic nerve
  • When more than one nerve is affected, this is known as mononeuritis complex
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9
Q

What is diabetic amyotrophy?

How does it present?

A
  • Amyotrophy is progressive wasting of muscle tissues
  • It is rare, usually developing in middle aged men
  • In diabetes, it presents as painful wasting of quadriceps
  • Course is variable, often with gradual but incomplete improvement
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10
Q

What is autonomic neuropathy?

How does it present?

A
  • Autonomic neuropathy is a group of symptoms that occur when there is damage to the nerves that manage every day body functions
  • Sympathetic dysfunction leads to postural hypotension, ejaculatory failure, reduced sweating and Horner’s syndrome
  • Parasympathic dysfunction leads to erectile dysfunction, constipation, urinary retention and a Holmes-Adie pupil (large and irregular pupil)
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11
Q

Outline the natural history of renal complications of diabetes

A
  • Usually manifests 15-25 years after diagnosis
  • CKD is leading cause of premature death in young diabetics (neuropathy will affect 30%)
  • Most important intervention is adequate blood pressure control
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12
Q

What are the macrovascular complications of diabetes?

A
  • Diabetes is a risk factor in the development of atherosclerosis
  • Increased risk:
    • 2x increased risk of stroke
    • 4x increased risk of MI
    • 50x increased risk of amputation for gangrene
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13
Q

What are the causes and consequence of diabetic foot?

A
  • 10-15% of diabetic patients develop foot ulcers at some point in their lives.
  • Foot problems are responsible for 50% of diabetes-related hospital admissions.
  • Ischaemia, infection and neuropathy combine to produce tissue necrosis.
  • Medical supervision and patient education hope to reduce the number of amputations required.
  • Patients may lose some proprioceptive function and fall more easily.
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