Microvascular Complications of Diabetes Mellitus Flashcards
State the 3 main sites of microvascular complications.
Retinal arteries (retinopathy) Glomerular arterioles (nephropathy) Vasa vasorum (neuropathy)
What 4 factors correlate with risk of microvascular and macrovascular complications?
Glycaemic control (HbA1c)
Hypertension
Genetics
Glycaemic memory
Describe the mechanism of glucose damage to blood vessels.
Hyperglycaemia leads to oxidative stress + hypoxia
This triggers an inflammatory cascade, which leads to local activation of pro-inflammatory cytokines, inflammation + damage
What instrument is used to look into the eye?
Fundoscope
What are the 4 types of diabetic retinopathy?
Background
Pre-proliferative
Proliferative
Maculopathy
What three features do you see in background diabetic retinopathy?
Hard exudates
Microaneurysms
Blot haemorrhages
What are hard exudates caused by?
Leakage of lipid contents makes the back of the eye look a cheesy colour
Describe pre-proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
Soft exudates (cotton wool spots) There will be some haemorrhages
What do soft exudates indicate?
Retinal ischaemia
Describe proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
Involves the formation of new vessels (in response to retinal ischaemia)
New vessels are generally more fragile + can bleed at any time
Describe maculopathy.
Hard exudates near the macula
Same disease as background diabetic retinopathy, but hard exudates are near macula
This can threaten direct vision
What are the steps taken in managing background diabetic retinopathy?
Improve blood glucose control
What is the treatment for pre-proliferative and proliferative diabetic retinopathy?
Pan-retinal photocoagulation
Describe the treatment of maculopathy.
Need a grid of photocoagulation in the affected area (aim to limit damage to the macula (so NOT pan-retinal photo coagulation)
State 3 histological features of diabetic nephropathy.
Mesangial expansion
Basement membrane thickening
Glomerulosclerosis (hardening of the capillaries)