ChemPath: Diabetes Cases Flashcards
What does compensation mean with regards to acid-base balance?
You are improving pH by making something else worse
usually with
eg. DKA - metabolic acidosis (breathe off CO2)
COPD - Resp acidosis (CO2 getting worse)
Why do acidotic patients become unconscious?
Brain enzymes cannot function at acidic pH
State the equation for osmolality.
Osmolality = 2(Na + K) + urea + glucose
What is the anion gap?
Na + K - Cl - Bicarb
There should always be a small gap between anions and cations due to the contribution of anions that are not measured
Normal ~18mM
List some causes of high anion gap.
- Ketosis
- Lactic acidosis
- Methanol
- Ethylene glycol poisoning
How does an increase in plasma pH affect serum calcium levels?
As pH increases, plasma proteins start to stick to calcium more than usual. Total plasma calcium levels will remain normal but there will be less free ionised calcium (active form). This leads to tetany (which can make patients hyperventilate even more).
Why do patients with hyperosmolar hyperglycaemic state become unconscious?
It causes dehydration of the brain
What is the danger of giving lots of fluids to someone with HHS?
It can cause cerebral oedema, so 0.9% saline should be used to achieve a slower reduction in plasma sodium
What is a major consequence of metformin overdose?
Lactic acidosis
Describe the Cori cycle. How does metformin affect this?
- Lactate is produced by anaerobic glycolysis in the muscles.
- This goes to the liver and is converted back to glucose which will then return to the muscle
- Metformin inhibits hepatic gluconeogenesis (the conversion of lactic acid to glucose in the liver) thereby resulting in lactic acidosis
NOTE: excess lactic acid is normally excreted by the kidneys, but in renal failure the kidneys cannot handle the excess lactic acid
What is biochemical definition of diabetes mellitus?
Fasting blood glucose >7.00 mmol/L
How are the results of an oral glucose tolerance test (75g glucose) interpreted?
Impaired glucose tolerance = 7.8 - 11.1 mM at 2 hours
Diabetes = > 11.1 mM at 2 hours
What is the difference between pink puffers and blue bloaters in COPD?
- Pink puffers = very breathless, because they are still sensitive to CO2 which rises due to poor lung function in COPD
- Blue bloaters = the brain stops responding to rising CO2 so you are not breathless and the CO2 will continue to rise