Antidiabetic drugs Flashcards

1
Q

Which drugs are used to treat DM type 2? What do they do?

A

Biguanide - Metformin - Reduces hepatic glucose production, acts peripherally to increase glucose uptake, mainly into fat and muscle tissue. Rarely causes hypoglycaemia ( no insulin release) and doesn’t lead to weight gain.

Sulphonylureas - Glibenclamide, Glipizide, Gliclazide, Glimepiride, Tolbutamide. - Stimulate insulin release from the pancrease, so patient must have some residual beta-cell function. Might encourage weight gain.

Prandial glucose regulators - Repaglinide, Nateglinide, Meglitinide - very short acting insulin release stimulators, taken shortly before meals. Low risk of hypoglycaemia.

Alpha Glucosidase inhibitor - Acarbose - inhibits intestinal alpha glucosidases, delays digestion of starch and sucrose. May cause flatulance.

Glitazones (thiazolidinediones) - Pioglitazone - Increase sensitivity to insulin by increasing transcription of insulin sensitivity genes. Protects the cells in pancreas. Can be given alone or with metformin or sulphonylureas.

Incretin mimetics / GLP-1 analogues - Exenetide, Liraglutide, Lixisenatide, Dulaglutide - Increase insulin when needed, reduce hepatic gluconeogenesis when not needed. Reduce rate of digestion and gastric emptying, may reduce appetite.

DPP-4 inhibitors (Gliptins) - Sitagliptin, Vildagliptin …gliptin - blocks the action of DDP-4, an enzyme that destroys incretin.

SGLT2 inhibitors - Dapagliflozin, Canagliflozin, Empagliflozin - Lead to increased urinary excretion of glucose, reducing blood levels. Depend on kidney function. May lead to urinary tract infections.

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2
Q

What type of insulin are most diabetic treated with?

A

Human insulin

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3
Q

How is the rate of insulin absorption controlled?

A

By increasing the size of the particles, or complexing it with zinc or protamine.

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4
Q

What are the types of short-acting insulins?

A

Soluble insulin - onset 30 mins, activity 2-4hr, subsides by 8hr, IV in hypoglycaemic emergencies by effects only last 30 mins by this route

Insulin lispro, insulin aspart - insulin analoges, faster onset and shorter action time (no dimer formation)

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5
Q

What are the types of intermediate acting insulins?

A

isophane insulin - protamine and insulin

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6
Q

What are the types of long actin insulin?

A

Protamine Zinc - complexed with both protamine and zinc, not used often as bind soluble insulin.

Insulin zinc suspension - poorly soluble zinc crystals, duration up to 35 hr

Insulin glargine - long, peakless activity (11-12hr)

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7
Q

What are the newer anti-diabetic drugs and how do they work?

A

1) Increasing GLP-1 levels, either by the administration of an analogue (glucagon-like peptide-1, GLP-1 mimetics, e.g. exenatide, liraglutide) or
2) inhibiting its breakdown (dipeptidyl peptidase-4 ,DPP-4 inhibitors - the gliptins Vildagliptin, sitagliptin), is therefore the target of two recent classes of drug.

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8
Q

How is exenatide administered?

A

Subcutaneous injection within 60 minutes before the morning and evening meals. It should not be given after a meal.

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9
Q

What is the advantage of liraglutide over exenatide?

A

Liraglutide only need to be given once a day

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10
Q

When are Glitazones / thiazolidinediones contra-indicated?

A

Heart failure

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