Diabetes in Children Flashcards
Acanthosis Nigricans
most common type of diabetes in children
type I. results from pancreatic beta cell destruction.
Insulin resistance with relative insulin deficiency
type2
outline alternative classes of DM besides type I and II
ethnic groups at higher risk for T2DM
first nations, hispanic, african-american, asian.
- multiple risk factors often present
- obese adolescent or teenager
comorbid findings along with type 2 DM
obese, family history, PCOS, acanthosis nigricans on PE, indolent history not uncommon
PE/Lab findings that may cue you into identifying seconadry diabetes
- nontype I/type II– secondary diabetes
- an oncologic or rheymatologic patient
- hyperglycemia picked up during workup or management of another condition
- striking clinical features of Cushings, Acromegaly
identifying inherited diabetes
3 P’s of typical presentation of Type I diabetes
3P’s : polyuria, polydipsia, and polyphagia.
+ unexplained weight loss, fatigue, blurred vision, vandidiasis, ketoacidosis
initial lab investigations when suspecting T1DM
in office: urine dip for glucose and ketons. Meter glucose.
Lab: urinalysis Rand M, random serume glucose, serum electrolytes, possible capillary blood gas.
- oral glucose tolerance test: contraindicated if symptomatic patient or if fasting or random hyperglycemia.
- HbA1c: long term management tool, not indicaetd at diagnosis in children.
T/F: you need to monitor HbA1c in children with T1DM suspecting
long term management tool, not indicaetd at diagnosis in children. FALSE.
When is an oral glucose tolerance test contraindicated as an initial laboratory investigation?
- symptomatic patient
- fasting or random hyperglycemia
Stabilization of T1Dm
- diet and insulin
- education (knowledge, skills) for parental and child.
Diabetes Routine: bloog glucose monitoring
how often should you follow up after T1DM diagnosis
follow up visits every 4 months