Insulin Flashcards
What is the role of insulin?
Stimulates uptake of glucose into liver, muscles and adipose tissue
Decreases hepatic glucose output – inhibit gluconeogenesis
Inhibit glycogenolysis
Promotes uptake of fats
What types of insulin are available?
Combine insulin
Animal
98% are on human insulin = genetically identical, made in factories
How does altering the structure of insulin effect its pharmacokinetics?
If you alter the structure of insulin = change its rate of metabolism
Swapping a proline for aspartine in the beta chain = very rapidly absorbed insulin = novorapid
Discuss insulin pump therapy
For T1 DM
Delivering a constant stream of rapid acting insulin
Have a meal – it will then delivery insulin
Describe rapid acting insulin
Action 5-15 min
Inject before eating
Lasts 6 hrs
Novorapid
Describe short acting insulin
Action 30-60 min
Inject 15-30 min before eating
Lasts 10 hrs
Actrapid, humulin S
Describe Intermediate acting insulin
Action 2-4 hrs
Lasts 20 hrs
Covers between meals and over night
Insulatard
Describe long and very long acting insulin
Action 2-6 hrs
Long lasts 24 hrs
Very long lasts 50+ hrs
What is the gold standard treatment for DM
Gene therapy
Take cells – turn them into beta cells
Outline the adverse effects of insulin
Hypoglycaemia
Hyperglycaemia
Lipodystrophy – lipohypertrophy or Lipoatrophy
Painful injections
Insulin allergies
How does T1 and t2 DM differ?
1 = destruction of beta cells
2 = most overweight, insulin resistant or beta cell failure
How do we treat T2 DM?
Lifestyle = low sugar/fat/calorie, exercise
Non-insulin therapies = bariatric surgery
Drug = metformin, sulphonylureas, alpha glucosidase inhibitor, glitazones
What are the NICE targets regarding T2 DM
HbA1c = 6.5-7.5%
Discuss metformin
Reduces hepatic gluconeogenesis
Limits weight gain
Decreased insulin resistance
Decreased CVS events
Side effects = GI symptoms
Limits weight gain
Discuss sulphonylureas
Stim beta cell to release insulin
Gliclazide
Side effects = weight gain, hypo