Hypoglycaemia Habituation Flashcards
Describe how blood glucose fluctuates
After meal - blood glucose spikes and insulin released from beta cells and glucose is either transported into cells or converted into glycogen
After fasting - blood glucose drops and pancreas releases glucagon and there is a breakdown of glycogen to glucose and increased gluconeogenesis
What is iatrogenic hypoglycaemia?
Low glucose due to the way we administer it
How does iatrogenic hypoglycaemia cause recurrent hypoglycaemia?
It impairs defences against subsequent hypoglycaemia
What happens in impaired awareness of hypoglycaemia?
When an individual who is on insulin no longer displays symptoms of hypoglycaemia and so doesn’t recognise they are having a hypoglycaemic episode
With intact awareness of hypoglycaemia, what occurs in the checkpoint system?
Glucose falls and you have a release of hormones
Then warning symptoms
Then cognitive impairment
What range of glucose does the checkpoint system cover with intact awareness of hypoglycaemia?
2-3mmol of glucose
What is habituation?
Reduction in psychological, behavioural or physiological response to a stimulus as a result of repeated or prolonged exposure
How many criteria of habituation are there?
Nine
Can hypoglycaemia habituation be reversed?
Yes, via “dis-habituating stimuli”, must be acute and novel
What is a dis-habituating stimulus?
Another (usually strong) stimulus that is presented alongside the stimulus that is habituated