Diabetic Complications Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards

1
Q

What are 3 big microvascular complications of hyperglycemia

A
  • Retinopathy
  • Nephropathy
  • neuropathy
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2
Q

There is a significant reduction in cardiovascular and microvascular disease for every __% drop in A1C

A

1%

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3
Q

Neovascularization of the retina

A

The body’s response to lack of adequate blood flow due to hypoglycemia to the retina by making new vessels that are very fragile and can leak exudates blocking vision

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4
Q

1 leading cause of new blindness and what 2 things is it strongly related to?

A

Diabetic retinopathy (strongly related to duration of diabetes and presence of hypertension)

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5
Q

Diabetic retinopathy screening for type 1 diabetics

A

Adults and children should have dilated eye exam within 5 years of onset then repeated annually

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6
Q

Diabetic retinopathy screening for type 2 diabetics

A

Patients should have dilated eye exam shortly after diagnosis with subsequent exam repeated annually

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7
Q

Diabetic retinopathy screening for women with diabetes planning to become pregnant

A

Have eye exam first trimester with followup through pregnancy and for first year postpartum

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8
Q

3 principles of diabetic retinopathy/nephropathy treatment

A
  • optimize blood sugar control
  • optimize blood pressure control
  • optimize lipids
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9
Q

Metabolic memory/legacy effect

A

Refers to how patients who have early aggressive management of diabetes have better outcomes and less progression in retinopathy, neuropathy, and nephropathy than those who did not even after returning to less intense therapy later on

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10
Q

Diabetic retinopathy treatment (2)

A
  • Panretinal laser photocoagulation decreases loss in patients
  • Focal laser photocoagulation in eyes decreases loss in patients
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11
Q

Earliest marker of diabetic nephropathy we should test for in at risk groups for diabetes progression

A

Microalbuminuria (more predictive as can detect lower levels than a dipstick and progression is likelty to result in end stage renal disease)

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12
Q

Excess albumin indicates presence of glomerular ____

A

hypertension

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13
Q

Diabetic nephropathy screening for type 1 diabetics

A

Perform annual urine microalbumin after first 5 years, measure serum creatinine at least annually

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14
Q

Diabetic nephropathy screening for type 2 diabetics

A

Perform annual microalbumin urine test in all type 2 diabetics after diagnosis, measure serum creatinine at least annually

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15
Q

Diabetic nephropathy screening for pre-diabetics

A

Perform annual urine microalbumin

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16
Q

Sources of false positives in albumin/creatinine ratio (6)

A
  • blood in urine
  • exercise
  • infection
  • CHF
  • hypertension
  • hyperglycemia
17
Q

Diabetic nephropathy albuminuria requires ___ abnormal specimens over __ time period to make diagnosis

A

2-3, 3-6 months

18
Q

Even in the absence of hypertension, if a patient has presence of micro or macroalbumin they should be placed on…

A

….an ACEI or ARB (never both just FYI)

19
Q

Blood pressure needs to be kept below ___ mmHg systolic

A

140mmHg

20
Q

Recall, ACEI and ARB’s dilate what vessel of the renal system?

A

Efferent arteriole

21
Q

SGLT2 inhibitors constrict what vessel of the renal system?

A

Afferent arterioles

22
Q

Common presentation of diabetic peripheral neuropathy

A

Chronic, symmetrical**, length dependent (feet before hands) sensation then motor polyneuropathy with nocturnal exacerbation making prickly pain worse

23
Q

Diabetic neuropathy progression

A
  • Begins with pain and tingling
  • Eventually becomes painless (and seems to get better) but actually ulcerates because….
  • Progression from sensory to motor causing redistribution of weight
24
Q

Charcot foot is brought on by advanced ____ and ___ but not ____

A

neuropathy, microfractures, lack of circulation

25
Q

Screening for diabetic neuropathy

A

-Screen anually with pinprick, vibration (increases prediction of foot ulcers), ankle reflexes

26
Q

Treatment of diabetic neuropathy by management of sugars will initially cause the discomfort to….

A

….worsen before it gets better

27
Q

Diagnosis of diabetic peripheral neurpathy (1)

A

-clinical

28
Q

Diabetic autonomic neuropathy

A

Neuropathy with many similar predictors to peripheral and often presents after peripheral but presents with resting tachycardia, exercise intolerance, orthostatic hypotension <20mmHg, or gastroparesis and is associated with signficantly higher overall mortality

29
Q

Sudomotor dysfunction

A

A sign of diabetic autonomic neuropathy characterized by excess diaphoresis from nipple line upward but not below

30
Q

Women with diabetes are at same risk for heart attack as…

A

….nondiabetic males

31
Q

Top 3 lab values that are predictive for CAD

A

1) LDL
2) HDL
3) HbA1C