Diabetes Type 2 Flashcards
What is type 2 diabetes?
where repeated exposure to glucose and insulin makes the body more resistant to the effect of glucose so more and more insulin is required to stimulate glucose uptake, eventually making the pancreas fatigued and damaged
Give 6 risk factors for T2 diabetes:
1) older age
2) ethnicity (Black African, South Asian, Caribbean)
3) sedentary life style
4) family history
5) high carbohydrate diet
6) obesity
Give 8 presentations associated with T2 diabetes:
1) polyuria
2) polydipsia
3) fatigue
4) unintentional weight loss
5) opportunistic infections e.g. oral thrush
6) slow wound healing
7) glucose in urine
8) acanthosis nigricans
What is acanthosis nigricans?
thickening and darkening of the skin in the neck/axilla/groin, giving it a velvety appearance which is associated with insulin resistance
What HbA1c range indicates pre-diabetes?
42-47mmol/mol
What HbA1c range indicates diabetes?
48+ mmol/mol
Is the genetic link stronger in type 1 or type 2 diabetes?
Type 2
What is MODY?
MODY – maturity onset diabetes of the young – this is a rare type of type 2 diabetes. It will present in young people who have a family history of type 2 diabetes. It is dominantly inherited.
What is the prevalence of T2DM in the Uk?
The overall prevalence of this disease in the UK is about 5%. This rises to 10% by the age of 70.
Excepted to double by 2030
What can the onset of type 2 DM be accelerated by?
- Stress
- Pregnancy
- illness
- Certain drugs
What is the pathology behind T2DM?
Initially insulin is still released normally, and will still bind to insulin receptors, but it will not cause the normal physiological changes inside the cell. This occurs in genetically susceptible individuals due to modifiable lifestyle related factors. This is known as insulin resistance
Type-2 diabetes results when a person cannot secrete enough insulin to overcome this ‘resistance’.
Muscle cells in particular show increased insulin resistance and decreased glucose uptake
The secretory failure of insulin occurs when there is increase Beta-islet cell apoptosis, and the remaining cells fail to respond to insulin signalling
Increased lipolysis with elevated free fatty acids
Alpha-cell dysfunction – elevated glucagon levels
Increased glucose reabsorption by the kidneys
Altered cerebral responses to insulin and apetite
Why does elevated glucose production in the liver occur?
not only does a high blood glucose occur because normal digested glucose cant be taken up by cells, but it has a secondary effect on the liver; there is less glucose entering liver cells, and so the liver reacts as if blood glucose were low, and begins glycogenolysis, and raises blood glucose even more.
What are the 3 methods that diagnosis can be confirmed by?
HbA1c >6.5% – on at least two occasions
Fasting blood glucose (FBG) >7.0 mmol/L
OR – Random blood glucose >11.0 mmol.L, with subsequent elevated FBG on a separate day
Oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT)
Initial fasting blood sugar level (BSL) >7.0 mmol/L
End of test (after 75g of oral glucose, retested at 2 hours) >11.0 mmol/L
What is HbA1c?
HbA1c is a type of ‘glycated haemoglobin’ – essentially haemoglobin that has been altered due to the presence of glucose in the bloodstream.
The higher the glucose level, the greater the amount of glycated haemoglobin – or HbA1c – in the blood. And, as red blood cells have a lifespan of about 90 days, the HbA1c value is in indicator of what glucose levels have been doing for the past 90 days.
What is the screening guidelines for T2DM?
Screen everyone over 40
Consider screening anyone over 25 if likely high risk – e.g. high risk ethnic group (South Asian, Chinese, African-Caribbean, Black African origin)
Use a verified screening assessment tool – for example the Diabetes Risk Assessment Tool
If low or intermediate risk, screen every 5 years
If high risk, perform HbA1c or fasting glucose
What is the classic acute triad presentation of T2DM?
- Polyuria
- Thirst
- Weight loss