5. Diabetes therapy Flashcards

1
Q

describe the general management of T1DM

A
  1. dietary management and regular exercise
  2. monitoring of plasma glucose levels (finger prick and BM stick and reader)
  3. INSULIN THERAPY
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2
Q

how does insulin affect plasma glucose levels

A

Acts at tyrosine kinase Rs on target cell membranes to DECREASE plasma glucose levels by:

  1. stimulate glucose uptake by skeletal muscle and adipose cells (GLUT4 translocation)
  2. inhibit hepatic gluconeogenesis
  3. stimulate hepatic and muscle glycogenesis
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3
Q

how does insulin affect plasma lipids and amino acids

A

Decreases plasma lipids by:

  1. increase hepatic/adipose lipogenesis and decrease lipolysis
  2. increase lipoprotein lipase activity in capillary beds, e.g. of adipose

Decrease plasma amino acids by:

  1. increasing amino acid uptake and protein synthesis in liver, muscle and adipose
  2. decreasing proteolysis in liver, skeletal and cardiac muscle
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4
Q

name the 6 main insulin categories

A

Different formulations influence rate of absorption:

  1. ultrafast acting
  2. rapid acting
  3. short acting
  4. intermediate acting
  5. long acting
  6. very long acting
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5
Q

describe 3 different types of insulin regimen

A
  1. 1, 2 or 3 injections/day: injections of short- or rapid-acting insulin mixed with intermediate-acting insulin (e.g. NovoMix 30)
  2. multiple daily injection basal-bolus: injections of short- or rapid-acting insulin before meals with 1+ separate daily infections of intermediate- or long-acting insulin to cover basal requirement
  3. continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (insulin pump): programmable pump and insulin storage reservoir that gives regular or continuous amount of insulin (rapid or short acting) via subcutaneous needle or cannula
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6
Q

name the possible adverse effects of insulin

A
  1. hypo- or hyperglycaemia
  2. lipodystrophy at injection site: lipohypertrophy or lipoatrophy
  3. painful injections
  4. insulin allergies (very rare)
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7
Q

name 2 factors that result in poor adherence to diabetes therapy

A
  1. (perceived) risk of hypoglycaemia

2. (fear of) weight gain

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8
Q

what is the general target for HbAc1 in T2DM Ps

A

6.5-7.5%

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9
Q

describe the 1st line therapy for T2DM - what is the MOA of this drug?

A
  1. dietary management (bariatric surgery/very low calorie diet) + regular exercise
  2. METFORMIN
    - reduces insulin resistance (increased glucose use by tissues)
    - reduces hepatic gluconeogenesis
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10
Q

if plasma glucose is not being controlled by metformin alone, what are the next steps

A
  1. metformin + other drug (SU/pioglitazone/GLP1/DPP-4i/glifozins)
  2. metformin + other drug (SU/pioglitazone/GLP1/DPP-4i/glifozins) + insulin
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11
Q

what is the MOA of sulphonylureas?

A

stimulate insulin release from B cells

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12
Q

name 2 possible side effects of sulphonylureas

A
  1. weight gain

2. hypoglycaemia

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13
Q

what is the mode of action of pioglitazone and why is this rarely used now

A

Bind and activate peroxisome proliferator activated receptors (PPARs):

  • increase insulin sensitivity in muscle and adipose
  • decrease hepatic gluconeogenesis

Rarely used as concerns with weight gain, fluid retention, heart failure, bone metabolism effects & bladder cancer

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14
Q

what is the MOA of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP1)?

A

Enzyme with similar effects to insulin:

  1. increases insulin synthesis and secretion from B cells
  2. decreased glucagon secretion from a cells
  3. decreases hepatic gluconeogenesis (indirect)
  4. increases glucose uptake in muscle (indirect)
  5. decreases gastric emptying and food intake (satiety)
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15
Q

what is the MOA of DPP-4 inhibitors (gliptins)

A

break down enzyme that inhibits GLP1

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16
Q

what is the MOA of dapaglifozin

A

inhibits SGLT2 in PCT so glucose lost in urine

17
Q

name 2 possible side effects of dapaglifozin

A
  1. UTIs

2. polyuria

18
Q

what are the benefits of metformin?

A
  1. no weight gain
  2. can be combined with other drugs
  3. decreased risk of CVD
19
Q

what are possible ADRs of metformin?

A
  1. GI disturbances, e.g. abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhoea (often improve after a few days, take tablets with meals to reduce)
  2. lactic acidosis (rare, 1-5/100,000), symptoms inc. abdominal pain, extreme tiredness, slow/shallow breathing, being cold, slow heart rate
  3. VitB12 deficiency (rare)
20
Q

what are the contra-indications for metformin?

A

CKD4