Pathology of Diabetes Mellitus Flashcards
What is the pancreas composed of?
Lobules of glandular tissue surrounded by fat
What part of the pancreas is the endocrine pancreas?
Islets of Langerhans
How many of the Islet of Langerhan cells are B cells?
2/3
What does insulin do?
Acts on many tissues, such as fat, where is binds to its receptor and drives glucose into the cell
Explain the pathway of increases glucose in plasma leading to glucose decreasing?
What genetic relationship to the aetiology of type 1 diabetes has been found?
Molecules that help T cells recognise self from non-self (human leukocyte antigen (HLA) molecules)
So, in type 1 diabetes cannot distinguish own cells from other cells so autoimmune attack on B cells
What does the autoimmune attack on B cells in type 1 diabetes cause?
Lymphocyte infiltration of islet (insulitis) leading to destruction of B cells causing decreases insulin production
What environmental triggers are possible linked to type 1 diabetes?
? Chemicals
? Bacteria in gut altered in infancy
? Viral infection (molecules on viral surface mimic molecules on outside of B cells)
What is the aetiology of type 2 diabetes?
Combination of:
- reduced tissue sensitivity to insulin (insulin resistance) and
- inability to secrete very high levels of insulin
What is a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes?
Explanded upper body visceral fat (pot belly)
also called central adiposity, which is how men and woman after menopause put on weight
What does central adiposity occur due to?
Increased intake of food and lack of exercise (genes relatively unimportant)
How does pot belly lead to type 2 diabetes?
Causes increased free fatty acids in blood (patients not yet diabetic) which causes decreases insulin receptor sensitivity
So more insulin is needed to get same amount of glucose into cells
Pancreas reaches point where cannot secrete enough insulin
What does central adiposity lead to?
Hyperinsulinaemia
What are the genetic risks to get type 2 diabetes?
Multiple genes involved in causing inadequate “high level” insulin secretion by B cells
Not HLA genes
Not adiposity genes
What is the link between a gene variant of B cells and type 2 diabetes?
If gene is a variant may promote insulin production at low levels but not high levels, which is needed when there is a decreases receptor sensitivity to insulin
So genes involved in type 2 diabetes are ones for poor B cell ‘high end’ insulin secretion
(if have few abnormal genes can still produce lots of insulin, if may genes are abnormal cannot)