Macrovascular Diabetic Complications Flashcards

1
Q

What is a macrovascular disease in Diabetes?

A

Early widespread atheroscerosis:

Causing problems with ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease and peripheral vascular disease - earlier in those with diabetes

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2
Q

What is the process for the development of atheroma?

A

Isolated foam cells
Then there is fatty streak
Can progress to intermediate lesions - intracellular lipid accumulation and a core of extracellular lipid (visible to the naked eye)
Develops into fibro atheroma - multiple lipid cores
Eventually = complicated lesion (ulceration into the artery, so showers of platelet emboli go on to block smaller arteries)

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3
Q

Why is atheroma associated with diabetes?

A

Diabetics = associated with increased LDL and decreased HDL concentrations

Smooth muscle atrophy is important in the
complicated lesions = thrombosis showering further down

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4
Q

What is a metabolic syndrome?

A

Constellation of risk factors for coronary artery disease:

Slightly elevated sugar
Low HDL cholesterol 
Hypertension (BP >135/ something)
Central adipocity
Insulin resistance 
Inflammation CRP
Adipocytokines
Urine microalbumin
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5
Q

What are the macrovascular complications of diabetes?

A

Ischaemic heart disease
Cerebrovascular disease
Renal artery disease
Peripheral vascular disease

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6
Q

Why is hyperglycaemia is associated with a significantly lower life expectancy?

A

Esp. in young people = lowered longevity

Due to complications from diabetes - more affected in women than men
The higher the HbA1c, the higher the risk for MI

Compared to the general population, diabetics have a greater risk of dying from IHD and CVD

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7
Q

In terms for morbidity and mortality, what do macro and micro vascular diseases cause?

A
Microvascular = morbidity
Macrovascular = morbidity and mortality
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8
Q

Why type of disease is a macrovascular disease?

Systemic or localised disease?

A

Macrovascular disease is a systemic disease and is commonly present in multiple arterial beds

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9
Q

What is ischaemic heart disease?

A

Narrowed / blocked coronary arteries supplying the heart, lack of blood and oxygen supply to heart causes heart muscle to die

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10
Q

What is cerebrovascular disease?

A

Conditions and disorders that affect the blood vessels and blood supply to the brain - blockages, malformations, haemorrhages etc.

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11
Q

What is peripheral vascular disease?

A

Blood circulation disorder that causes the blood vessels outside of your heart and brain to narrow, block, or spasm

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12
Q

What is Renal Artery Stenosis

A

Affects the renal artery
Initially contributes to hypertension
May contribute to renal failure

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13
Q

Why does only treating hyperglycaemia have a minor effect on increased CVD risk?

A

Treatment targeted to hyperglycaemia alone has minor effect on increased risk of CVD

Treating sugar levels alone does not reduce ischaemic heart disease - must also treat risk factors esp. treating lipids

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14
Q

Prevention of macrovascular disease requires what?

A

Aggressive management of multiple risk factors

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15
Q

Risk factors for macrovascular disease?

A
Non-modifiable: 
Age
Sex
Birth weight
Family history / genes
Modifiable:
Dyslipidaemia
High blood pressure
Smoking
Diabetes
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16
Q

Recap mechanism for each stage of the development of macrovascular disease:

A
Initial lesion - Macrophage
Fatty Streak - Intracellular lipid
Intermediate - extra-cellular lipid
Atheroma - core of extra cellular lipid
Fibroatheroma - fibrotic/calcific layers
Complicated - surface defect/thrombosis