Lecture 20: Management of Type 1 Diabetes Flashcards
List the current strategies to support and treat people with type 1 diabetes
Education:
- team based DSN, dietitian, doctor.
- structured education e.g. STEP (DIANE, doe adjustement for normal eating)
- person with diabetes is main team member
Nutrition and lifestyle management:
- CHO counting
- physical exercise
Skills training:
- home blood glucose monitoring
- injection technique
- hypos
- sick day rules
Insulin: analogues, pens and pumps
diabetic ketoacidosis DKA symptoms
- nausea and vomiting
- abdominal pain
- sweet smelling, ‘ketotic’ breath
- drowsiness
- rapid, deep ‘sighing’ respiration
- coma
- polyuria
sick day rules for type 1 diabetics
Check BG and ketones if unwell.
Check ketones even if BG ‘normal’ if unwell
NEVER stop insulin: continue basal
ketoacidosis signs
- dry mucous membranes
- sunken eyes
- tachycardia
- hypotension
- ketotic breath
- Kussmaul resp.
- altered mental state
- hypothermia
diagnosis of diabetic ketoacidosis
- ketonaemia/ketonuria
- metabolic acidosis
- usually with hyperglycaemia
what to do if you have blood ketones and your blood sugar level is 14 or above?
blood ketones < 0.6mmol/l is normal, repeat test after 2 hours to check level isnt rising
blood ketones 0.6-1.4mmol/l > risk of DKA > drink plenty of sugar free fluids, give a correction dose of insulin and retest blood sugar and ketones 1-2 hourly
1.5-2.9mmol/l > risk of DKA > as above and contact diabetes team for advice
3.0 or above > DKA > as above and phone URGENT MEDICAL ADVICE - to attend PAU
treatment for DKA
fluid replacement and insulin
complications of DKA
- hyper and hypokalaemia
- hypoglycaemia: rebound ketosis, arrhythmias, acute brain injury
- cerebral oedema
- aspiration pneumonia
- arterial and venous thromboembolism
- ARDS
causes of hypoglycaemia
- too much insulin/SU
- inappropriate timing of insulin/SU
- injection site problems
- inadequate food CHO intake/fasting
- exercise
- alcohol
what is found in an emergency hypobox?
- fruit juice
- dextrose tabs
- glucogel
- 20% or 50% dextrose
- hypo-management protocol
how can we facilitate long-term health and wellbeing in a diabetic patient?
what specific health risk can we manage?
- optimal blood glucose control (HbA1c) to reduce microvascular disease and to improve pregnancy outcome.
- optimal blood pressure control to reduce nephropathy.
- manage CV risk factors e.g. smoking, cholesterol
- screen for early detection of complications: feet, eyes and kidneys