Long term complications of diabetes Flashcards

1
Q

What is affected with large vessels and small vessels in diabetes?

A
large = cardiovascular 
small = kidneys, eyes, nerves
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2
Q

Complication risk factors for diabetes

A
hyperlipidaemia 
metabolic/glycaemic control 
hypertension 
smoking 
duration of diabetes 
genetics
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3
Q

What does peripheral arterial disease lead to an increased risk of?

A

amputation

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4
Q

Cardiovascular risk factors - modifiable and non modifiable

A

modifiable = smoking, glycaemic control, bp control, lipids

non modifiable - age, gender, family, proteinuria

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5
Q

Primary prevention of CV risk reduction

A
smoking cessation 
target HbA1c 
control blood pressure 
lifestyle choices 
statin therapy - simvastatin
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6
Q

What is microvascular disease affecting?

A

arterioles and capillaries

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7
Q

3 types of diabetic retinopathy

A

background retinopathy
proliferative retinopathy
maculopathy

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8
Q

Why is visual acuity a poor guide for diabetic retinopathy?

A

need regular screening for other complications

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9
Q

Retinal abnormalities in diabetes

A
microaneurysms - dot 
hard exudates 
blot haemorrhages 
cotton wool spots 
new vessel formation 
advanced eye disease 
vitreous haemorrhage
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10
Q

2 treatments of proliferative retinopathy

A

laser photocoagulation

vitrectomy

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11
Q

How does laser photocoagulation work?

A

destruction of peripheral ischaemic retina leads to reduction of endothelial growth factors and regression of new vessels

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12
Q

Describe diabetic maculopathy

A

macula exudate, blot haemorrhages and ischaemia

oedema behind macula and reduce visual acuity

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13
Q

Cataracts

A

common in elderly, clouding of lens and increased in diabetes with poor glycaemic control
high correction with surgery and visual acuity determines timing

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14
Q

3 types of diabetic neuropathy

A

peripheral neuropathy
mononeuritis
autonomic neuropathy

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15
Q

Peripheral neuropathy

A

glove and stocking - feet
insensitive to trauma, paraesthesia, burning pain and numbness
loss of muscle between toes
risk of diabetic foot ulcer

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16
Q

4 ways to help peripheral neuropathy and at risk feet

A

early detection
protection of feet
self care education
pain relief eg capscain cream, amytriptiline

17
Q

Ways to reduce ulcer prevention

A
foot screening and risk scoring 
patient education on foot care
regular podiatry for those at risk 
trauma avoidance/fitted footwear 
huge morbidity from ulcers
18
Q

Charcot foot

A

Condition causing weakening of bones in people with neuropathy

19
Q

Remember feet - signs of at risk feet

A
impaired circulation 
impaired sensation 
impaired vision 
foot shape changes 
abnormal pressure
20
Q

2 precipitating factors of acute sensory peripheral neuropathy

A

rapid tightening of control eg planning pregnancy

acute metabolic upset

21
Q

Proximal motor neuropathy

A

elderly men - type 2 DM

wasting of thigh muscles, weight loss, painful

22
Q

Mononeuritis

A

mainly affect ocular nerves - CN 3,4,6
acute foot drop - peroneal nerve
vascular event

23
Q

Autonomic neuropathy symptoms

A
erectile dysfunction 
postural hypotension 
diarrhoea 
gastric stasis and recurrent vomiting 
abnormal sweating, peripheral oedema, urinary retention
24
Q

How is autonomic neuropathy diagnosed?

A

symptoms and pattern

abnormal ECG

25
What happens in diabetic nephropathy?
damage to structure and function of meshwork of capillaries which make up glomerulus glomeruli become leaky to larger molecules and eventual reduction in ability to filtrate blood
26
How to detect kidney disease?
microalbuminuria screening test - urine sample definitive test - overnight urine for albumin excretion rate
27
Management of early kidney disease
optimise glycaemic control tight bp control ACEI therapy cardiovascular risk progression