Obesity, Diabetes, and Infectious Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

Diabetes mellitus

A

8% of Americans have it, this number has tripled since 1980
The result of insufficient or inadequate use of insulin (produced in Islets of Lanerhans, pancreas)
Can lead to high deposits of waste (ketones) in the blood and over metabolism and proteins (diabetic ketoacidosis), which destroys tissue

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2
Q

Types of diabetes mellitus

A

Type I
- Usually diagnosed before 30
- Formally called insulin dependent (IDDM)
- Complete lack of insulin (most difficult to regulate and treat)
- Cause is unknown
* Autoimmune-triggering event (infection, toxin)
* Genetic

Type II
- On the increase in US (especially in Children)
* Can often be managed with diet, activity
- Formally called non-insulin dependent (NIDDM)
- Obesity and inactivity, genetics, advanced age and race (AI, AA, His, C)

Gestational Diabetes (GDM)
- Occurs during pregnancy
* Increase risk of type I
- Symptoms for all types
* Malfunction in the bodies ability to make or use insulin
* Polyuria, glucose in urine, excessive thirst, weight loss, excessive eating, hard to heal, blurred vision, eventually weakness and fatigue
* Type I-fast sudden onset
* Type II- slow onset, often don’t have symptoms

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3
Q

Problems with diabetes mellitus

A

Acute: (emergency situation)
- Diabetic Coma
* Intense thirst, confusion, fruity breath, shallow breathing-coma
- Insulin Shock
* Shaky, faint, perspiration, confusion,
* Give juice

Chronic
- Slow healing- amputation
* DFU-diabetic foot ulcers
- Vascular system-organs and muscular system
* Renal failure, kidney disease - nephropathy
* Retinopathy
- Neurological-neuropathy
- Other:
* Periodontal disease
* Diabetic distress
* Autonomic Neuropathies

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4
Q

Common language of diabetes

A

Insulin - hormone produced by the pancreas that transports glucose to the body’s cells
- Needed for energy and growth and healing

Ketoacidosis - when a patient is hyperglycemic, the body breaks down it’s self, leaving ketones behind, this can be deadly, or damaging

Polydipsia - sweat a lot
Polyuria - pee a lot
Polyphagia - constant hunger/thirst

Hyperlipidemia - excessive fat and lipids in the blood stream
- Better with better treatments but still decreases life expectations

Hypoglycemia - insulin shock (too much insulin-not enough glucose)
- Trembling, seating, hunger, anxiety, confusion, death
- Give Sugar

Hyperglycemia -to little insulin
- Untreated-diabetic coma
- Major issues with vascular structures-ultimately amputation
- Hypertension over 140/90
- CVD and CVA, PAD
- Retinopathy
- Nephropathy (ESRD)
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Neurodegeneration
- Periodontal disease

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5
Q

OT with diabetes mellitus

A

Life long
- Every age group
Impact to treatment
Part of treatment
OT
- Symptom management
- Medication routines
- Foot checks
- Weight/health maintenance
- Amputation

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6
Q

Obesity

A

Public Health Crisis
On the increase in the US

Complex problem influenced by:
- Genetics
- Thryoid - metabolic issues
- Neurological links
- Vitamin D deficiency
- Stress
- Depression
- Social determinates

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7
Q

Obesity in children

A

5x more likely to be obese in adulthood
Musculoskeletal issues in adolescence
Depression
Cardiac effect
Diabetes type II

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8
Q

Diabetes in elderly

A

Changes in activity and food
Transfers and movement

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9
Q

Obesity impacts all ages

A

Depression
Cardiac disease
Diabetes and limb loss
Lymphedema
Osteoarthritis
Sleep apnea or obesity hypoventilation syndrome
Impact to ADLs, travel, social isolation, adaptive equipment

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10
Q

Interventions for obesity

A

Bariatric Surgery
- Gastric Band
- Bypass
* Of the small intestines with a small “stomach” pouch
* Permanent, non reversible
- Obera Ballon

Issues with surgery
- Overeating
- Nutritional issues

Medications
- No quick fix
- Address the psychological of eating
- Side effects
* CVA and other Cardiac issues
* Liver issues

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11
Q

Role of OT with obesity

A

Evaluation as to occupational impact
Children
- Is it impacting developmental milestones
Health Promotion
Increasing involvement in physical activity or occupations
- psychosocial and physical connection
Modifying the environment or task
Modifying dietary intake
Reducing impact of obesity
Education of client and family
Consideration in safety with adaptive equipment

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12
Q

Infectious diseases

A

Disorders that can be passed from one individual to another
- TB
- HIV
- Meningitis
- E.coli
- Hepatitis
- Flu/COVID/strep

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13
Q

How can we avoid infectious diseases?

A

Vaccinations
Universal precautions
- hand hygiene
- PPE
- respiratory hygiene and cough etiquette
- aseptic technique
- use and dispose of sharps properly
- clean and reprocess reusable patient equipment
- perform routine environmental cleaning
- handle and store waste safely
- handle and store linen safely

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14
Q

Precautions for contact diseases

A
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15
Q

Tuberculosis

A

Airborne pathogen
Cross species
- Cows, dogs
Opportunistic infection
- Areas of poverty and illness
Nearly irradiated in US until 1970s
Cough, chest pain, bloody sputum
- Can go dormant (not contagious)
- Effects multiple organs, death
Medication - resistant TB
- By law
- 6-12 months

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16
Q

Meningitis

A

Two types
- Acute Bacterial- EMERGENT
- Viral (majority)
Most likely to occur were people are in close contact
- Hospital, college
Bacterial - hospitalized with heavy duty antibiotics with corticosteroids to decrease inflammation, usually isolated
Viral - symptomatic treatment, bedrest, fluids if bad antivirals
Prognosis: If caught early-good, later it can lead to brain damage, hearing loss, epilepsy, cognitive impairment, death
Vaccine!

17
Q

HIV/AIDS

A

Stages of AIDS
1(A)- CD4 lymphocyte cell count of 500 or above
- No symptoms (may initially have had the “flu”)
2(B)-cell count 200-499
- Symptoms, but not AIDS defining
- Fever, diarrhea, PID
3 (C)-CD4 count below 200 it is AIDS
- One or more AID’s defining illness
* Tuberculosis, Kaposi sarcoma, Non-Hodgkins, other cancers and infections
* Problems
> Fatigue, SOB, impaired CNS and PNS, visual deficits, depression, muscle weakness

1,000,000 in US living with the disease
- Entered the US around 1970
- Women are the fastest growing group
- 1 in 5 don’t know they have it
Zambia 30% of population
Get it
- Blood or blood products
- IV drug use
- Sexual activity
- Maternal /child
Retrovirus
Starts as HIV virus - can take up to 14 months (or more) for antibodies to appear

No cure
Antiviral drugs
- Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)
- Very expensive
Symptomatic care for other issues

18
Q

Hepatitis

A