Insulin therapy Flashcards

1
Q

What is Intensive Therapy? What is the other name for it?

A

Matching insulin to food, activity and life events using individualized adjustment guidelines based on glucose results
Basal-bolus

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2
Q

what are the components of basal bolus insulin therapy

A

􏰥 Multiple daily injections (MDI)

􏰥 Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion

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3
Q

Whom is basal-bolus therapy for?

A

Type 1, Type 1.5 , Type 2, gestational

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4
Q

What is type 1.5 diabetes

A

diabetes that initially presents as t2 but progresses rapidly to require insulin

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5
Q

Benefits of intensive therapy

A
  • 45% reduction in microvascular complications associated with type 1 (DCCT)
  • 42% risk reduction in any cardiovascular event
  • Overall risk (both t1 and t2) of microvascular complications were shown to be decreased by 35%
  • Insulin therapy can be integrated into the individual’s preferred lifestyle habits
  • Quality of life is improved
  • Overall better control
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6
Q

Disadvantages of intensive therapy

A
  • more injections-> possible stigmas
  • Carbohydrate counting should be part of the deal- Not usually attractive!!
  • Frequent monitoring (4x/day) is necessary-> More “homework”
  • Should keep in contact with educator
  • Weight gain due to :
    tighter control = less glycosuria
    Extra insulin for extra food
    Over treating of reactions e.g. treating low sugar with carbs-> extra calories
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7
Q

Define targets for A1C

A

≤6.5% adults with t2 diabetes o reduce the risk of CKD (chronic kidney disease) and retinopathy if at low risk of hypoglycemia
≤7.0 MOST ADULTS with T1 or T2 diabetes
7.1-8.5 for :
- Functionally dependent 7.1-8.0
- Recurrent severe hypoglycemia and/or hypoglycemia unawareness: 7.1-8.5%
- Limited life expectancy: 7.1-8.5%
- Frail elderly and/or with dementia: 7.1-8.5%

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8
Q

What is the upper limit on A1C target table and why

A

8.5
Values higher than this should be avoided to minimize risk of symptomatic hyperglycemia and acute and chronic complications

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9
Q

Values for preprandial PG and 2h postprandial PG to achieve a target A1c of <7% :

A

preprandial PG: 4.0-7.0 (4.0-5.5 if A1C not at target)*
2h postprandial PG 5.0-10.0 (5.0-8.0 if A1C not at target)*

*To be considered, but balanced against the risk of hypoglycemia- these conditions will help us achieve A1c of <7% faster, but pose a risk of hypoglycemia

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10
Q

How does the impact of preprandial PG and 2h postprandial PG on A1C differ depending on the values of A1C

A
  • when A1C is very high (10-9) we first try to target the 2h post-prandial PG as these values have a bigger impact on high A1C
  • once A1c gets closer to 7, we start focusing on preprandial PG

the impact of post and pre PG differs depending on where patients A1C is at

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11
Q

What is the number 1 killer of people with diabetes?

A

CVD

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12
Q

What is PPG that is out of control a risk factor for? in people with T2. What about T1?

A

In subjects with type 2 diabetes, there is evidence that PPG is an independent risk factor for myocardial infarction

  • > Such an association has yet to be defined for type 1 diabetes…
  • But Hyperglycemia can acutely alter normal homeostasis, it is reasonable to hypothesize that this effect will be accentuated in any individual with diabetes.
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13
Q

Factors that alter PPG

A
  • meal composition:
    high fat= longer digestion
    high protein = slower digestion
    fiber
  • stress, illness, exercises and hormones
  • physical activity
  • insulin timing
  • pre-meal glucose and timing of injection

time of day
- post breakfast is often more difficult

  • gastroparesis (delayed gastric emptying)-macrovasuclar complication (decreased gastric motility)

is basal adequate
- if meal is skipped… is BG at target?

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14
Q

Which meal is usually the most problematic?

A
  • breakfast- not always, but this is often the case
  • breakfast is the largest glycemic spike of the day
  • may be due to dawn syndrome
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15
Q

When do we recommend to inject rapid-acting insulin?

A

rapid acting insulin is recommended to be injected 10-15 min before a meal (Nova, Humalog)
- administration of rapid-acting insulin analogs 15 min before mealtime result in lower postprandial glucose excursions and more time spent in the 3.5-10 mmol/l range, without increased risk of hypoglycemia.

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16
Q

What is the mean peak time of postprandial glucose
when do rapid-acting insulin analogs display a maximum effect

What can you conclude?

A

mean peak time of postprandial glucose: 75 min
Rapid-acting insulin analogs display a maximum effect at ~100 min after subcutaneous injection.
The insulin peak action is better synchronized with the glycemic excursions after a meal, thereby potentially minimizing the height of the postprandial glucose excursions.

17
Q

Symptoms of hypoglycemia

A

􏰥 “Wicked” morning headache
􏰥 “Foggy head”
􏰥 Waking up with messed up blankets
􏰥 Nightmares or vivid dreams

18
Q

What is the chain reaction of hypoglycemia

A

Having one reaction increases the risk for another!!

􏰥 Second reaction will be harder to recognize due to depleted

19
Q

Why is A1C not always representative of good control

A

as A1C only represents an average - values can fluctuate a lot, but A1C won’t reflect this fluctuation

tip: ask for log book with blood sugar values

20
Q

What are the components of TDD?

A

TDD includes both BASAL and BOLUS insulin needs per day

21
Q

What is the ideal split of TDD? Give an example of when that would be different?

A

Ideally 50% of total dose given as basal insulin and 50% as rapid insulin
e.g. athlete that consumes a lot of food would need more rapid than basal

22
Q

What is the TDD of insulin for t1 adult? in u/kg per day For new onset T1?
What is the average does used per kg? For young adults?

A

Type 1 adult diabetics require an insulin dosage of 0.3-1.0 u/kg per day
􏰧 New onset Type 1: 0.3 units/kg
􏰧 On average 0.5 - 0.7 u/kg is most commonly used; J Walsh uses 0.53 u/kg for adults*
􏰧 Young adults (age 18-21) “still growing” causing insulin resistance…higher doses required (0.7-1.0 u/kg)

23
Q

Insulin initiation and titration regimens for people with t2

  • healthy BW
  • overweight
  • obese with A1C> 9%
A
  1. 5u: healthy body weight
  2. 7u: overweight
  3. 0u: obese with A1c>9%
24
Q

is insulin to carb ratio always constant?

A

no
ratio can change with seasons
ratios are different for different people
Ratios can vary per meal. Strongest ratio usually at breakfast

25
Q

What is insulin to carb ratio

A

How many grams of CHO are “covered” by 1 unit of insulin

26
Q

What are the 2 ways of estimating insulin to carb ratio

A

1.a) When TDD (total daily dose) is greater than 40 units total:
500/TDD = 1 unit : _____ g CHO
1.b) When TDD is less than 40 units total:
450/TDD = 1 unit : _____ g CHO

2) Compare with weight requirements formula: (5.7 x wt (kg))/TDD : _____g CHO

27
Q

1:10 and 1:8 insulin to carb ratio

which requires less insulin?

A

1:10 ratio-> smaller amount of insulin for the same amount of carbs than 1:8 ratio

28
Q

What is sensitivity/correction factor? Why do we need it?

A
  • The drop in mmol/L that each unit of rapid insulin will provide
  • Useful for correcting glucose once a target is set = better control
  • Patients should know their ISF, so as to calculate their own correction insulin doses
29
Q

How to calculate sensitivity/correction factor

A

100/ TDD= ISF (insulin sensitivity factor)

30
Q

example of using ISF

ISF= 3; actual BG= 12 and the target is 6. How many units of insulin do we need to achieve the target?

A

(12-6)/3= 2 units

aka If ISF = 3, the blood sugar level will be brought down by 3 mmol by 1 unit

31
Q

What is the duration of an insulin dose

A

about 4h

32
Q

rules of good control

A
  • Check A1c (+ make sure that its the true value as disease states may affect A1C values)
  • Hypoglycemia ??… when, where and how frequent-> Treat this first!!
  • Is this a basal insulin or bolus insulin problem??
  • Is Basal adequate (how would you know?)-> Check overnight first (bedtime/AM glucose) score should be NO MORE than 2 mmol/L difference with the morning value
  • Bolus: look at mealtimes 2hr post to evaluate carb ratio-> aim for NO MORE than 3 mmol/l elevation (look at BG 2h before and after the meal)
  • Any patterns that need solving???
33
Q

What is self-management education?

A

A systematic intervention that involves active patient participation in self-monitoring of health parameters and/or
decision-making.
SME should be patient-centered, collaborative and interactive!!!

34
Q

What is sliding scale?

A

sliding scale refers to the progressive increase in the pre-meal or nighttime insulin dose, based on pre-defined blood glucose ranges. Sliding scale insulin regimens approximate daily insulin requirements.
this scheme is more reactive- we wait for BG t go up before giving insulin

35
Q

What does ACB, PCB, ACL, HS stand for

A
ACB- before breakfast
PCB- after breakfast
ACL- before lunch
ACS - before supper
HS0 before bed
36
Q

When is it a good time to calculate CHO ratio?

e..g 48g CHO and 4 units hUmalog

A

When blood sugar is in target before a meal and doesn’t rise more than 3 mmol/L at 2hrs post-meal —> good time to calculate CHO ratio.
Patient ate 48g CHO and injected 4 units of Humalog
48g ÷ 4 units = CHO ratio of 12
(therefore, 1 unit of Humalog covers 12g of CHOs)