In hospital Management of Diabetes Flashcards

1
Q

Improving glycemic control improves patient outcomes
and reduces length of stay and cost • National guidelines recommend In hospital glycemic targets of
__-___ mmol/L

A

Improving glycemic control improves patient outcomes
and reduces length of stay and cost • National guidelines recommend In hospital glycemic targets of
5-10 mmol/L

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2
Q

Testing blood glucose with hospital approved meter at least 4
times/day:

When?

A
  1. before each meal and bedtime
  2. add 3am test if concerned about nocturnal hypoglycemia
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3
Q

BBIT; general premise and what does each letter stand for?

A

a physiologic way to replace insulin, mimicking how the body natrually releases insulin

Basal - long or intermediate-acting insulin administered once or twice daily to support the glucose released from the liver and to a lesser extent the kidneys
• Bolus - short or rapid acting insulin administered with meals
• to cover the glucose release from the anticipated meal
• Insulin Correction - short or rapid acting insulin given to correct unanticipated hyperglycemia
• Usually given with the bolus insulin
• Titration - insulin doses are to be titrated every 24-72 hours to achieve and maintain in-target BG values

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4
Q

T/F BBIT is superior over sliding scale inicidence in terms of minimizing hy

A
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5
Q

National guidelines recommend In hospital glycemic targets of 5-10 mmol/L. How to achieve these targets?

A
  1. testing blood glucose with hospital approved meter at least 4 times/day
  2. insulin
  3. BBIT
  4. avoid the use of outdated, unsafe, and unproven insulin protocols; sliding sclae insuline alone
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6
Q

outline the findings of the Rabbit2 study that looked at the surgery outcomes in T1DM that did BBIT vs SSI

A

BBIT:

significant reduction in hyperglycemia

  • decreased complications (wound infections, pneumonia, bacteremia, resp failure, acute renal failure)
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7
Q

3 populat bolus rapid acting insulin

A

aspart (novorapid), lispro/humalog, humulin R

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8
Q

4 common intermediate or long acting insulin

A
  1. detemir (levemir)
  2. glargine (lantus)
  3. NPH (intermediate)
  4. degludec (restricted access)
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9
Q

Calculating BBIT

A
  • based on patients characteristics

if more sensitive to insulin, use .4.5units/kg

if less sensitive to insulin, use .5-1.9units/kg

find your total, then dedicate 50% of the amount to basal insulin, then 50% to bolus insulin deivided into doses with each meal

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10
Q

Someimtes you need to correct your insulin if blood glucose is above target. What is the type of correction insulin?

A

correction insulin is the same typpe as the rapid one used by the patient.

correction insulin is not routinely recommended at bedtime due to risk of hypoglycemia overnight

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11
Q

T/F you should give insulin after the meal in BBIT

A

false. glucose check –> insulin given –> meal eaten.

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12
Q

when should insulin doses be held?

A
There are very few instances where all insulin doses should be held
• When patient not eating (NPO), only the bolus dose of insulin should be
held; basal and correction insulin is continued
• Patients with type 1 diabetes ALWAYS need basal insulin to avoid
diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA)
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13
Q

KEY POINT: if a pump is stopped, you must replace basal insulin within __hours to prevent DKA.

A

2 horus.

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14
Q

do insulin pumps give basal insulin?

A

false. only uses rapi acting insulin. delivers a continuous infusion of rapid-acting insulin to cover the insulin basal needs. a bolus of insulin is given with each meal to correct high sugars.

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