Diagnosing diabetes and blood glucose interpretation Flashcards
For a Type 2 diabetic which diagnostic tests would be used for assessment?
For a type 2 diabetic with symptoms present, one of the following diagnostic tests need to be administered with a positive test result.
If symptoms are not present then two of the following diagnostic tests must be administered in combination with positive test results for both:
Random venous blood glucose (>11.1 mmol/L)
Fasting venous blood glucose (>7 mmol/L)
Glucose tolerance test (>11.1 mmol/L)
HbA1c (>48 mmol/mol)
Explain the rationale of using a glucose tolerance test.
To assess whether the body has difficulty metabolising an intake of sugar/carbohydrates.
It is often used for patients that have borderline glucose levels around the diagnostic threshold.
Explain the process of a oral glucose tolerance test.
The patient will have to fast for 8-12 hours before the test. On arrival a fasting venous blood sample will be taken before having 75 grams of anhydrous glucose (often in a powder). Then at regular intervals a blood sample will be taken (every 30 minutes) or just a single blood glucose test at 2 hours after the administration of rapidly absorbing glucose.
Which group of patients cannot have confirmation of a diabetic diagnosis confirmed by a HbA1c?
For children for either types of diabetes
For gestational diabetes
For suspected Type 1 diabetes
Those who have had symptoms less than 2 months
Patients who are high risk and are acutely ill
Presence of genetic, haematologic and illness-related factors that influence HbA1c and its measurement
Patients with pancreatic damage
Patient that are taking medication that cause rapid spikes in blood glucose levels such as steroids or anti-psychotics
How do HbA1c values differ for a patient without diabetes compare to a patient with diabetes?
A patient without diabetes you would expect their HbA1c value to be approximately 4-6% (about 40mmol/mol) whereas to diagnose a patient with diabetes you would expect over 6.5% (over 48mmol/mol)of their haemoglobin to be glycated.
What is the rationale of using a HbA1c test?
It is used to measure a patient’s average blood glucose levels across the lifespan of a hemoglobin molecule (roughly 8-12 weeks).
When is a HbA1c test used and why is it useful?
Can be used in the diagnosis of Type 2 and for the monitoring patient’s self-management of blood glucose levels at their three or sixth monthly diabetic review.
They are particularly useful for monitoring a patient’s control of their blood glucose as using a fingerprick test just indicates their control of blood glucose that day whereas the HbA1c value indicates the patient’s control of their blood glucose over the lifespan of a haemoglobin molecule.
At what blood glucose levels do symptoms of hyperglycemia and hypoglycaemia appear, and what symptoms would they expect to experience at those levels?
For hyperglycemia symptoms such as increased thirst, urination, unexplained weight loss, tiredness and blurred vision begin to appear when blood glucose levels reach >10-11 mmol/L.
For hypoglycemia symptoms such as disorientation, hyperventilation, reduced consciousness, blurred/ double vision occur when blood glucose levels drop below 3mmol/L.
How quickly do symptoms of Type 1 diabetes appear?
In children symptoms of diabetes develop within a few hours but most likely days to a week. In adults with type 1 diabetes usually it takes a bit longer such as over days or weeks.
Describe how diabetic ketoacidosis differs from hyperosmolar non-ketonic syndrome?
Diabetic ketoacidosis is a clinical manifestation of Type 1 diabetes (undiagnosed or newly diagnosed) whereas hyperosmolar non-ketonic syndrome is a manifestation of Type 2 diabetes (undiagnosed or newely diagnosed). Whilst the symptoms are very similar (hyperventilation, nausea, vomiting, dehydration, weakeness and reduced consciousness a key difference is that diabetic ketoacidosis has presence of ketone breath (pear sensation).
At what blood glucose level does HONK usually appear?
> 33 mmol/L
At what blood glucose level does DKA usually appear?
> 11 mmol/L (when they remain dangerously high). Do a ketone test when blood glucose is at this level.
Interpret blood ketone test results:
<0.6mmol/L is normal
0.6-1.5mmol/L at slight risk of DKA, retest in 2 hours
1.6-2.9mmol/L at an increased risk of DKA, contact GP or diabetic care team
3mmol/L or above, contact your diabetic care team and get medical help immediately
What are the advantages and disadvantages of using a urine test for management of diabetes?
They are beneficial for testing for ketones (indicating diabetic keto acidosis).
However they are not good for diagnosing diabetes as changes in urine concentration of glucose lags significantly to changes in blood glucose. Furthermore each patient has a different threshold for when glucose starts to over spill into the kidney.
Explain the five classical symptoms of diabetes?
Polyuria (when blood glucose levels exceed the renal threshold it causes osmotic diuresis)
Polydipsia (increased thirst due to polyuria)
Weight loss (inability of glucose uptake into cells resulting in the body burning fat and muscle)
Fatigue (inability to get blood glucose into cells)
Blurred vision (changes in blood glucose levels alters the refractive index in the eye).