Metabolic Disorders- Diabetes Flashcards
Type I Diabetes
- insulin-dependent (deficient)
- Insulin is not produced by the beta-cells in the pancreas, leading to inactivation of GLUT 4 and high blood glucose content (hyperglycemia) causing diabetes
Type II diabetes
- non insulin-dependent (resistant)
- Cell is resistant to effects of insulin due to prolonged overproduction that desensitizes the insulin receptor. Leads to defective activation of GLUT 4 and hyperglycemia causing diabetes.
Normal insulin and glucose physiology
Insulin binds to insulin receptor to activate GLUT 4 (muscle and adipose tissue) to facilitate removal of glucose from bloodstream and into cells
Canine diabetes mellitus
- Mostly type I (hypoinsulinemia)
- On the rise 2/1000 in 1970, 6.4/1000 in 1999, 10/1000 2023
- Peak occurrence is 7-11 yrs; more than 70% of patients are older than 7yrs
-Multifactorial causes
(Genetic predisposition, Obesity, Pancreatic cell destruction (ex. repeated pancreatitis for inflammation), Endocrine disorders
Feline diabetes mellitus
- Mostly type II (insulin resistant)
- 6x less sensitive to insulin, eventually progresses to type I
- Multifactorial- Genotype (DSH, Russian blue, Burmese, Siamese), Obesity (4-6kg overweight leads to a 50% decrease in insulin sensitivity), Inactivity
How does feline type II DM progress to type I DM?
Need 6x the amount of insulin to trigger the desired response of GLUT 4. If untreated more and more insulin is produced, causing an overuse of pancreatic cells resulting in inflammation and destruction. This destruction results in the inability of insulin production. Leading to a switch to Type I diabetes.
Conditionally- induced starvation
Starvation in the midst of plenty
An animal with diabetes is in a state of starvation due to believed carbohydrate deficiency because of a lack of insulin or an inefficiency of insulin.
Diabetes effect on metabolism
- glucose production
- lipolysis
- lipoprotein lipase
- randle cycle
- ketogenesis
- Muscle breakdown
Diabetes effect on lipolysis
Insulin suppress lipolysis in healthy conditions by activating phosphodiesterase (cAMP –> 5 AMP) and protein phosphatase-1 (dephosphorylates Hormone Sensitive Lipase) BUT in diabetic individuals, insulin deficiency/resistance results in an increased rate of lipolysis
Diabetes effect on glucose production
- Low levels of insulin or insufficient activity of insulin triggers the pancreas to make glucagon.
- High levels of glucagon stimulate glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis leading to an increase of glucose in liver which is transported back into blood further exacerbating hyperglycemia
Diabetes effect on lipoprotein lipase (LPL)
Insulin deficiency/inactivity reduces lipoprotein lipase activity which leads to inadequate FFA transport into muscle and adipose tissue from VLDL’s of liver
Results in weight loss (poor transport and high lipolysis), Hyperlipidemia and steatosis
Diabetes effect on the Randle cycle
Excess FFA blocks glucose oxidation. (FFA bound to albumin, not in VLDLs so no need for LPL and can be transported directly into cells through CD36)
Glucose transport impaired by lack of GLUT 4 activation caused by increased citrate. Also lipolysis creates high levels of acetyl-CoA which inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase and stalls glycolysis. Results in excess lipolysis and exacerbates hyperglycemia
Diabetes effect on Ketogenesis
Low levels of glucose in the cell (no GLUT 4 transport) and lack of insulin control of lipolysis. Glucagon stimulates gluconeogenesis which uses the oxaloacetate. This triggers excess acetyl-CoA to be used to make ketones
Can lead to Diabetic Ketoacidosis (diabetic individuals are always making ketones so can use ketone dipstick to determine diabetes)
Diabetes effect on muscles
- Muscle proteins begin to breakdown as starvation signal persists. Protein synthesis requires insulin. Proteolysis increase substrates for gluconeogenesis (hyperglycemia) and ketogenesis (ketoacidosis)
Cataracts
Opacity of the lens prevents light from being properly directed to retina
Common in dogs, rare in cats after diabetes diagnosis