Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (1) Flashcards
What occurs here?
How does it present?
Which investigations are done?
➊ Autoimmune destruction of pancreatic B-cells, resulting in little/no Insulin production = Hyperglycaemia
➋ • 25-50% present with DKA
• Classic triad of symptoms of Hyperglycaemia:
‣ Polyuria (due to osmotic diuresis)
‣ Polydipsia (due to dehydration)
‣ Weight loss (due to catabolism)
➌ • Exclude other associated pathologies
• Bloods – FBC, U&E, HbA1c, Glucose, TFTs, Anti-TTG
What is the mainstay of its management?
→ What is the complication that occur with frequent injections in the same spot?
What else is part of its management?
➊ Insulin
• Long-acting given once a day, and Short-acting given 30 minutes before meals
• Insulin pump is another option – Insulin infused subcutaneously with cannula replaced every 2-3 days
→ Lipodystrophy
➋ • Monitoring dietary carbohydrate intake
• Monitoring blood sugar levels on waking, at each meal and before bed
• Monitoring and managing complications
What are its short-term complications?
What are its long-term complications?
➊ • Hypoglycaemia
• DKA
➋ • Microvascular – Neuropathy, Retinopathy, Nephropathy (particularly glomerulosclerosis)
• Macrovascular – Coronary artery disease, Peripheral ischaemia (Poor healing, ulcers, diabetic foot), Stroke, HTN