Endocrinology Flashcards
explain the pathophysiology of type 1 diabetes
insulin deficiency, due to autoimmune destruction of insulin-secreting pancreatic beta cells
explain the pathophysiology of type 2 diabetes
insulin resistance develops - body can no longer produce enough insulin to cope with the high levels of glucose entering the body so the cells become resistant to insulin’s effects. there is hypersecretion of insulin, by a depleted number of beta cells, so the insulin levels are increased by not enough to control glucose homeostasis. hyperglycaemia and lipid excess are toxic to beta cells so insulin secretion then drops.
what is the classical triad of symptoms for a presenting type 1 diabetic? what causes each of these
polyuria - due to osmotic diuresis from blood glucose exceeding the tubular reabsorption capacity. thirst - due to fluid and electrolyte loss. weight loss - fluid depletion and accelerated breakdown of fat and muscle.
give 3 complications a type 1 diabetic may present with
staphylococcus skin infections, retinopathy, polyneuropathy, erectile dysfunction, arterial disease e.g. MI.
if you take a random blood glucose as part of general monitoring/while testing for something else, and it comes back at 23mmol/L, what do you need to confirm a diagnosis of diabetes?
repeat the blood glucose test at another time. one result is enough if the patient is symptomatic.
what investigation is used to measures long term glucose control? what are the normal and diagnostic values?
HbA1c - glycosylated haemoglobin - glucose is taken up by haemoglobin and remains in blood for 8-12wks - high blood glucose over that period shows up as a raised HbA1c. diagnostic value is >48mmol/mol.
what is the WHO diagnostic criteria for diabetes mellitus ?
hyperglycaemic symptoms - polyuria, polydipsia, unexplained weight loss, visual blurring, genital thrush, lethargy AND: fasting plasma glucose >7.0mmol/L OR. random plasma glucose >11.1 mmol/L.
describe the management of type 1 diabetes, apart from insulin therapy.
risk factor management (esp. BP control!). education, diet and exercise e.g. educate on self-adjusting doses. frequent self-monitoring of blood glucose and long-term monitoring of HbA1c.
what are the steps of tablet treatment for a type 2 diabetic?
1) lifestyle changes and metformin 2) add DPP-1 inhibitor (gliptin)/sulfonyurea/glitazone. 3) add any of the above not used 4) start insulin therapy alongside other medications.
how does metformin work?
reduces rate of gluconeogenesis, reducing hepatic glucose output. increases insulin sensitivity. decreases absorption of glucose in GI tract. NO weight gain or hypos, but can cause lactic acidosis.
how does sulfonylurea work?
binds to channels on beta cells to increase fusion of insulin granulae with cell membrane. INCREASES INSULIN SECRETION. can cause hypoglycaemia and weight gain.
what are the differences in onset between type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
type 1 - adolescent onset usual. type 2 - onset usually >40yrs. type 1 is linked to HLA D3 and D4, type 2 has no HLA association.
what are the differences in how type 1 and type 2 diabetes present?
type 1 will present with polydipsia, polyuria, weight loss, ketonuria etc. type 2 presents asymptomatically (picked up on blood test), or with complications e.g. MI.
what lifestyle factors is type 2 diabetes associated with?
obesity, lack of exercise, calorie and alcohol excess.
list some possible causes of DM
drugs - steroids, anti-HIV drugs, antipsychotics, thiazides. pancreatic - pancreatitis, surgery, trauma, pancreatic destruction (haemachromatosis, CF), pancreatic cancer. Cushing’s disease. Acromegaly. Phaeochromocytoma. Hyperthyroidism. Pregnancy (gestational diabetes).
give 3 risk factors for type 2 DM
overweight/obese. central adiposity. Asian background. Age >40yrs. FHx. gestational diabetes.
give 3 general management measures that should be undertaken in diabetes mellitus
inform DVLA. foot care. exercise. diet - low in sat fats and sugar, high in starchy carbs. avoid binge-drinking - delayed hypo. educate on managing hypo - sugary drinks, dextrose tablets.
describe the common insulin options used to treat diabetes mellitus
1) ultra-fast acting (Novorapid) injection at start of meal. 2) isophane insulin - peak at 4-12h. 3) pre-mixed insulins with ultra-fast components. 4) long-acting recombinant human insulin analogues (insulin glargine/detemir) - used at bedtime, no peak so avoids nocturnal hypos.
give examples of possible injection sites for insulin. why is it important they are rotated regularly?
outer thigh, abdomen, arm. rotating reduces risk of infection and lipohypertrophy (lipohypertrophy).
give 3 possible complications of diabetes mellitus
infection/lipohypertrophy at injection sites. MI, stroke. nephropathy - microalbuminuria. retinopathy. cataracts. diabetic foot. neuropathy. hypoglycaemia - due to insulin spikes, skipped meals, incorrect dose adjustment for exercise etc.
describe the symptoms of hypoglycaemia
autonomic - sweating, anxiety, hunger, tremor, palpitations, dizziness. neuroglycopenic - confusion, drowsiness, visual trouble, seizures, coma
how would you treat hypoglycaemia?
oral sugar and long-acting starch (e.g. toast). IV glucose if can’t swallow.
what is a hypoglycaemic coma? how would you treat it?
rapid onset of hypoglycaemia preceded by aggression, sweating, high pulse, seizures - leading to loss of consciousness. treat with IV glucose - should recover promptly. sugary drinks and a meal once conscious.
give 3 symptoms of diabetic ketoacidosis
lethargy, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, abdo pain, polyuria, polydipsia, weight loss, breathlessnesss