Diabetes Flashcards
What is polyuria?
Production of abnormally large volumes of dilute urine
What is polydipsia?
Abnormally great thirst
What does increased glucagon levels and enhanced hepatic sensitivity to glucagon contribute to?
The excessive glucose production by the liver
What does insulin resistance in adipocytes result in?
Accelerated lipolysis and increased plasma free fatty acid levels both of which aggravate the insulin resistance in muscle and the liver and contribute to Beta cell failure
What does Increased renal glucose reabsorption by the sodium/glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) and the increased threshold for glucose spillage in the urine contribute to?
The maintenance of hyperglycaemia
How does neurotransmitter dysfunction contribute?
-Resistance to the appetite-suppressive effects of a number of hormones, as well as low brain dopamine and increased brain serotonin levels contribute to weight gain, which exacerbates the underlying resistance. -To the earlier described ‘ominous octet’ must be added vascular insulin resistance and inflammation, making the ‘decadent decoplet’.
What is prediabetes?
- Prediabetes means that your blood sugars are higher than usual, but not high enough for you to be diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes. It also means that you are at high risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.
- Prediabetes is also called:
1. borderline diabetes
2. Impaired Fasting Glucose (IFG)
3. Impaired Glucose Tolerance (IGT)
4. Impaired Glucose Regulation (IGR)
5. Non-diabetic hyperglycaemia
What are long term aims of NHS DPP?
- Reduce incidence to T2 diabetes
- Reduce complications e.g. stroke kidney eye and foot problems
3, Reduce health inequalities assoicated with incidence of diabetes
What are three core goals of NHS DPP Innervation?
- Achieving healthy weight
- Achievement of dietary recommendations
- Achievement of CMO physical activity recommendations
What is the distribution and function of GLUT-1?
- Endothelium and erthyocytes
- Basal transport (insulin independent)
What is the distribution and function of GLUT-1?
- Kidney, SI, liver, pancreatic Beta cells
- Low affinity transport (insulin independent)
What is the distribution and function of GLUT-3?
- Neurones, placenta
- High affinity transport (insulin independent)
What is the distribution and function of GLUT-4?
- Skeletal muscle, adipose
- Insluin-regulated glucose transport
How does glucose transport occur? What is the exception?
- Facilitated diffusion
- Luminal epithelial cells in kidney and intestine (which used active transporters SGLT1 and SGLT2)
How does insulin act normally in liver?
Increase glucose uptake Increase glycogenesis Decrease glyconeolysis Decrease gluconeogeenesis increase lipogenesis