Wk2 Diabetes Clinical Flashcards

1
Q

Alpha cells role in:

1 Blood glucose levels?

  1. glucagon?
  2. liver and kidney?
A
  1. elevate blood glucose
  2. secrete glucagon
  3. liver–secrete glucose kidney– retain glucose
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2
Q

How to differentiate between injected and endogenous insulin:

A

C-peptide levels

**if C-peptide present= endogenous

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3
Q

Autoimmune B-cell destruction:

A

DM1

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4
Q

Progressive insulin secretory defect with insulin resistance:

A

DM2

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5
Q

antibodies to GAD-65?

A

DM1

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6
Q

Big cause of drug induced hyperglycemia:

A

glucocorticoids

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7
Q

Diagnosed by glucose tolerance test?

A

gestational diabetes

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8
Q

Re-read screening guidelines….

A

slide 26-27

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9
Q

How does Hgb A1c work?

A

measures % of glycosylation on RBC’s

recheck every 3 months (RBC life-span)

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10
Q

Diagnostic criteria for diabetes (4):

A
  1. fasting glucose of 126 on two separate occasions
  2. random plasma glucose of 200 with sx (polyuria, polydipsia, weight loss)
  3. A1c > 6.4%
  4. (if pregnant) plasma glucose > 200 two hours after 75g oral glucose bolus
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11
Q

A1c range for pre-diabetes?

A

5.7-6.4%

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12
Q

PE findings in diabetes:

A
  1. BMI – >25 is RF
  2. BP > 140
  3. HEENT – retinal exam (microangiopathic hemorrhage)
  4. Neck – thyroid – possible MEN syndrome
  5. CV/Lungs: weak pulses, carotid bruits
  6. skin: ulcers, brown pigment
  7. reflexes and sensation: monofilament test
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13
Q

Microvascular complications of DM:

A

retinopathy

neuropathy

nephropathy (microalbumin screening)

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14
Q

Macrovascular complications of DM:

A

atherosclerosis (should be on aspirin px)

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15
Q

Labs to check in DM: (7)

A

glucose

A1c

lipids

microalbumin (urine??)

TSH

liver panel

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16
Q

BP goal in DM management:

A

140/80

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17
Q

LDL goal in DM management:

A

100 mg/dL

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18
Q

First line therapy for mild DM:

A

diet!!!

19
Q

Two drug that can lower A1c the most:

A

Metformin (a biguanide)

Sulfonylureas

  • glyburide
  • glipizide
  • glimipiride

**can lower 1-2%

20
Q

Two drug classes that increases satiety:

A

amylin analogs (Pramlintide)

GLP-1 agonists (Exenatide, Liraglutide)

21
Q

Drug class that decreases glucose absorption in the gut:

A

Alpha-glucosidase inhibitors (acarbose, miglitol)

22
Q

Three drug classes that decrease gastric emptying:

A

GLP-1 agonists —- Exenatide, Liraglutide

DPP-IV inhibitors —- “–gliptins”

amylin analogs —- Pramlintide

23
Q

Two drugs that decrease glucose production:

A

Metformin

TZDs —- Pioglitazone, Posiglitizone

24
Q

4 drugs that increase insulin secretion:

A
  1. sulfonylureas – Glimepiride, Glipizide, Glyburide
  2. GLP-1 agonists — Exenatide, Liraglutide
  3. DDP-IV inhibitors — “–gliptins”
  4. Meglitinides
25
Q

3 drugs that decrease glucagon secretion:

A
  1. GLP-1 agonists — Exenatide, Liraglutide
  2. DPP-IV inhibitors — “–gliptins”
  3. Amylin analogs — Pramlintide
26
Q

Two drugs that increase peripheral glucose uptake:

A

Metformin

TZDs — Pioglitazone, Rosiglitazone

27
Q

Drug that decreases glucose reabsorption:

A

SGLT2 inhibitors — Canagliflozin

28
Q

Contraindications for Metformin:

A

renal impairment

cardiac/respiratory deficiency

sepsis

lactic acidosis

liver disease/EtOH abuse

**radiographic contrast

29
Q

Creatinine cutoff for Metformin:

A

males: > 1.5
females: >1.4

30
Q

Patient case…

A

slide 50

31
Q

MOA of sulfonylureas:

A

bind sulfonylurea receptor on beta cells –> stimulate insulin release

32
Q

side fx of sulfonylureas:

A

hypoglycemia

weight gain

potential cardiac probs

33
Q

MOA of TZDs:

A

increase glucose uptake in muscle

keeps liver from overproducing glucose

34
Q

side fx of TZD’s:

A

edema***

CHF??

MI??

$$$$$

35
Q

MOA of GLP-1 agonists:

A

increased glucose dependent insulin secretion

decrease glucagon secretion

delay gastric emptying

$$$$$

36
Q

MOA of DPP-IV inhibitors:

A

prevents degradation of GLP-1 and GIP

$$$$

37
Q

Contraindication of GLP-1’s:

A

Thyroid cancer

38
Q

Short acting insulins:

A

Rapid**

  • Aspart
  • Lispro
  • Glulisine

Short**
Regular

39
Q

Long acting insulins (for establishing basal levels):

A

NPH —– intermediate

Detemir —– long 6-24 hrs

Glargine (Lantus)—— long > 24 hrs

40
Q

A1c target for most patients:

A
41
Q

When is A1c target 6-6.5%?

A

short disease duration

long life expectancy

no CVD

42
Q

When is A1c goal 7.5-8%?

A

h/o severe hypoglycemia

short life expectancy

comorbidities and complications

difficult control

43
Q

Only medical therapy without a ceiling?

A

insulin

44
Q

When can oral therapy be dc’d?

A

start of insulin