1- diabetes basic principles Flashcards
what is diagnostic threshold for glucose for diabetes diagnosis?
7mM (threshold was made based on risk of retinopathy)
what is
(a) normal glucose & diabetic diagnosis glucose?
(b) normal HbA1c & diabetic HbA1c?
a) normal 6mM and 7mM diabetic
b) 41mmol/mole normal and 48 mmol/mole
what is diabetic diagnosis for gestational diabetes?
5.1mM
what is C-peptide?
connecting peptide that cleaved off when pro-insulin cleaved to insulin = it’s measure to know if pancreas working
what are some disorders of insulin secretion?
- type 1 diabetes
- pancreatic diseases (pancreatitis, pancreatectomy, pancreatic cancer)
what are some disorders of insulin action?
- pure disorders (genetic ones like donohue & rabson mendenhall) -more in other lectures
- insulin resistance like obesity or type 2 diabetes
- endocrinopathies = cushings, acromegaly
- steroid induced
what is type 1 diabetes?
= autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta-cells resulting in beta-cell deficiency
→antibodies are marker of this destruction (95% of people have them in blood)
*note that not only children, now older people also can get type 1
what is type 2 diabetes?
- diagnosis of exclusion (not type 1, not unusual syndrome.. then type 2)
- mostly don’t need insulin to survive but can later in disease
what is presentation of diabetes?
= often asymptomatic
- polyuria (pee a lot)
- thirst & polydipsia (drink a lot because pee a lot)
- blurred vision (sugar in eyeball, messing up fluid)
- genital thrush (since pee out glucose)
- fatigue
- weight loss (when out of control diabetes)
*can also present with signs of complications like in optician
what are some micro and macrovascular complications of diabetes?
- microvascular = retinopathy, neuropathy, nephropathy
- macrovascular = MI, stroke, PVD
what is HbA1c?
- when haemoglobin exposed to glucose = it becomes glycated (this is HbA1c)
= this means that amount of glycation of RBC is proportional to amount of glucose the red blood cell has been exposed to in it’s life (90 days)
what is the 1 caution for HbA1c?
not effective in conditions of increased or reduced red cell turnover
e.g. haemolytic anaemia; Haemoglobinopathies may give spurious results
what is main action of insulin about glucose?
tells liver to stop producing glucose & tells skeletal muscle to take up glucose (by anabolic pathway)
in type 2 diabetes - what are the main dysfunctions of insulin & glucagon?
- insulin = impaired secretion or sensitivity
- glucagon = signal stays on (bad as telling liver to keep making glucose)