Devices, Daily Management and Acute Complications Flashcards

1
Q

Patient on NPH switching to Lantus

A

One time daily NPH = equivalent dose

Twice daily NPH: 80% of NPH dose

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2
Q

Administration options

A
Insulin pens
SQ insulin infusion pumps
V-go (pump-like-patch)
SQ ports
Continuous glucose monitors
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3
Q

What is an insulin pump?

A

A computerized device that allows for both continuous and non-continuous doses of insulin to be delivered to the body
SQ administration
Replaces insulin injections
Uses short acting insulin

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4
Q

Insulin Pumps Usage

A

Cartridge is filled with insulin
Inserted into pump and readied
Tubing is primed
Attached to site
Release drops of insulin every few minutes to achieve a programmed units/hr rate
Additional boluses can be manually released

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5
Q

Insulin Pump Advantages

A

Allows individualization of therapy
Helps adjust for variables (meals, exercise, hormones)
Allows for tracking of adherence

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6
Q

Insulin Pump Disadvantages

A

More complex
Requires greater diligence and adherence by patient
Cost

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7
Q

What are insulin pens?

A

An insulin injection system
Can be prefilled/disposable or durable/refillable
Available for most single insulin types
Always prime the pen
Keep pressing the button for 5-10 sec before removing

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8
Q

Advantages of insulin pens

A

Improved patient acceptability and compliance
Increased convenience and lifestyle flexibility
Greater reliability and accuracy of dosing
Simplification of insulin administration
Reduced injection pain
Cost

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9
Q

Disadvantages of insulin pens

A

Malfunction/greater complexity
Partial loss of dose due to early removal
Patient can not see dose going in
Limited availability of 1/2 unit dosing
Potential increased risk of needle sticks in hospital and nursing home setting

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10
Q

Hyperglycemia Cause and Symptoms

A

Less insulin being used or available

Increased thirst, urination, mood changes/agitation, hunger, vision changes, headache

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11
Q

Hyperglycemia management

A

Take insulin when/if appropriate
Increase fluid intake
Monitor for ketones (T1)

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12
Q

Hypoglycemia Cause and Symptoms

A

More insulin being released than needed

Confusion, dizziness, shakiness, headache, sleepiness, sudden hunger, sweating, seizure

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13
Q

Hypoglycemia Management

A

Fast acting sugar
Rate of 15
Glucagon, Dextrose IV

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14
Q

Rate of 15

A

15 grams of fast acting sugar
Test in 15 mins
Repeat until blood glucose increasing

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15
Q

Standard supplies to always have on them

A

ID
Monitoring: monitor, lancing device, lancet, antiseptic, strips
Hypoglycemic treatment: fast sugar, protein, glycagon

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16
Q

Standard supplies to have reasonable access

A

Meds: insulin, orals, syringes, pens, pump supplies

Hyperglycemic management: ketone testing, fluids

17
Q

Insulin container

A

10 mL vial of U-100 insulin (100 u/mL)

18
Q

Insulin storage

A

Unopened vials: refrigerator until expired
Opened vials: 28 days at room temperature (detemir: 42 days)
Rapid acting: 28 days
Pre-mixed/NPH: 10-14

19
Q

Fixed Insulin Combination

A

70/30 (aspart protamine and aspart or NPH and regular)
75/25 (lispro protamine and lispro)
50/50 (NPH and regular)