DM Injectable Meds Flashcards

1
Q

Function of Amylin

A
  • secreted by the beta cells of the pancreas
  • suppresses postmeal glucagon secretion
  • regulates rate of gastric emptying from stomach to small intestine
  • regulates plasma glucose concentration
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2
Q

Function of Glucagon

A
  • secreted by alpha cells of the pancreas
  • break down glycogen in the liver and muscles
  • increases the glucose levels in the blood
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3
Q

Types of Injectable Antiglycemics

A
  1. Insulin
  2. GLP-1 Agonists (Glucagon -like peptide 1)
  3. Amylin Mimetics
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4
Q

Rapid Acting Insulin Injectable Analogs

A
  • Meds:
    • Glulisine (Apidra)
      • glutamic acid substitution
    • Aspart (Novolog, Fiasp)
      • Aspartic acid substitution
    • Lispro
      • Lysine before proline, instead of other was around
  • Comments:
    • monotherapy or combo with oral agents
    • flexible dosing, rapid onset
    • safe in pregnancy, renal failure, liver dysfxn
    • Drug of Choice for high glycemic resistance
  • SEs;
    • hypoglycemia, weight gain, lipodystrophy, local skin rxn
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5
Q

Regular Human Insulin Properties

A
  • After SQ injection:
    • the insulin gets diluted with the interstitial fluid → hexamers (with zinc ions in the middle) break down into dimers → then become monomers (which are biologically active
    • This is the rate limiting step in absorption
  • Disadvantages:
    • hexamers are too big to cross the vascular endothelium
    • effects are delayed (30-60min lag time)
      • hypoglycemia is delayed
    • onset is slow
    • clearance is slow
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6
Q

When to Use Insulin?

A
  • preferred tx when A1C > 9%
  • Pt does not have an adequate response to oral antiglycemics:
    • if A1C > 8.5% → multi-dose insulin regimen
    • if A1C ≤ 8.5% → once-daily insulin regimen preferred
  • Factors to Consider:
    • current glycemic control
    • need for fasting and/or postprandial coverage
    • lifestyle requirements
    • liver or kidneys diseases
    • other oral antiglycemics
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7
Q

Estimating Basal and Pre-Meal Insulin Requirements

A
  • Estimating Basal Insulin:
    • ~50% of total daily daily insulin dose (TDD)
    • conservative approach: reduce the calculated 50% dose by 20% to avoid hypoglycemia
      • ex: TDD =25 units → 50% basal = 12.5 units → 20% reduction = 10 units basal
  • Estimating pre-meal insulin:
    • ~50% TDD → divided into 3 doses (i.e. breakfast, lunch, dinner)
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8
Q

Estimating insulin: carb ratio

A
  • Rapid Acting Insulin Analog
    • “500 rule” → 500/TDD = grams of carb: 1 unit of insulin
      • pt requireds 50 units/day of rapid acting insulin → 500/50 = 10gm of carbs: 1 unit of rapid-acting insulin
  • Regular Insulin:
    • “450 rule” → 450/TDD
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9
Q

Determine the Correction Factor for Insulin Dosage

A
  • Determine how far the BG drops per unit of insulin given:
    • Rapid-Acting insulin → use “1700 rule” or “2100 rule”
      • ex: pt needs 28 units/d of insulin (TDD) → 1700/28 = 60 mg/dL drop in BG for every 1 unit of rapid acting insulin
      • Regular insulin → use “1500 rule”
        • ex: 1500/28 = 54 mg/dL drop in BG for every 1 unit of “regular insulin”
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10
Q

What causes Fasting Hyperglycemia (i.e. Morning hyperglycemia)?

A
  • insufficient basal dose of insulin
    • i.e. hepatic glucose output is too high
  • insufficient dinner coverage
    • i.e. not enough short acting insulin was given
  • reactive hyperglycemia
    • usually in response to a nocturnal hypoglycemic episode
    • somogyi effect or rebound hyperglycemia rare & more often associated with DM type I
  • too many late night snacks
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11
Q

Somogyi Effect or Rebound Hyperglycemia

A

rare & more often associated with DM type I

  • hypoglycemia in the middle of the night → increase counter-regulatory hormones (glucagon, epi, cortisol, & growth hormones) → hyperglycemia in the AM
  • Hyperglycemia is atypical in AM with treatment resistance even when insulin dose was increased
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12
Q

Dawn Phenomenon

A
  • Rise of BG occurs between 4-8am after a physiological low point of BG level (not hypoglycemic state) occurs between 12-3am.
    • secondary to rising of growth hormones, cortisol, glucagon, or epinephrine
      • 30-40 mg/dL increase
  • Tx:
    • increase basal insulin (i.e. insulin glargine) would be indicated
    • if hypoglycemia occurs 4-8 hrs post dose → change basal insulin to BID dosing
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13
Q

GLP-1 Receptor Agonists: MOA & SEs

A

Incretin Mimetic

monotherapy: A1C reduced by 0.8-0.9%; combined therapy with others PO: A1C reduced by 1%

  • What do these do:
    • stimulate insulin secretion
    • delays GI emptying
    • reduces postprandial glucagon level
    • improves satiety
  • SEs:
    • GI: N/V/D
    • hypoglycemia, pancreatitis
    • weight loss
    • do not use in gastroparesis or severe GI disease or severe renal dz
    • BBW: potential risk for medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) & thyroid tumor sxs
      • for Semaglutide
  • Ending in either “senatide or zenatide”:
    • these are derived from lizards
      • so more side effects/adverse rxn can be seen
  • “glutide” endings:
    • are not derived from a lizard
      • so less adverse effects with these
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14
Q

GLP-1 Receptor Agonist Meds

A
  • Exenatide (Byetta)
    • (Bydureon) → from gila monster or heloderma lizard venom
  • Liraglutide (victoza)
    • if Renal impairment = NO adjustment
  • Dulaglutide
    • if Renal or hepatic dysfunction = no adjustment
    • SEs: N/V/D, abd pain, tachycardia av block, PR prolongation
    • causes thyroid C-cell tumors in rats
  • Lixisenatide (adlyxin)
  • Lixisenatide/Insulin Glargine (Soliqua)
    • eGFR = 15-30 ml/min – CAUTION
  • Semaglutide (Ozempic)
    • BBW: potential risk for medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) & thyroid tumor sxs
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15
Q

Amylin Receptor Agonist

A
  • Pramlintide (Symlin or Symlinpen)
  • MOA:
    • effects same as GLP-1 receptor agonist
    • stimulates insulin secretion
    • delays GI emptying
    • reduces glucagon level
  • When to use:
    • use immediately before meals
    • use in combo with insulin or other PO antihyperglycemics
    • do not use in gastroparesis
  • SE:
    • nausea, decreased appetite
    • HA, hypoglycemia
    • weight loss (mild)
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16
Q

Precipitating Factors for DKA

A
  • infx
  • omission/inadequate insulin
  • MI/stroke/trauma
  • meds – steroids, thiazides, sympathomimetics
17
Q

DKA: Hyperglycemia, Ketosis, Acidosis

A
  • Hyperglycemia (>250 mg/dL)
  • Ketosis:
    • negative charged ions
    • Anion Gap > 12 mEq/L (ref range: 3-11)
    • Na - (Cl + H3CO)
  • Acidosis
    • arterial pH ≤ 7.3
18
Q

Management of DKA

A
  • continue until pt is stable:
    • glucose: 150-250 mg/dL
    • acidosis resolved
    • insulin reduced 0.5-0.1 units/kg/hr
  • Give long acting insulin as soon as pt is eating (allow overlap–SubQ and IV)