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Diabetes Mellitus

Diabetes Mellitus. Epidemiology/Risk Factors. Epidemiology. It’s estimated that there were 30 million cases in 1985 to 285 million in 2010. International Diabetes Federation projects that 438 million individuals will have diabetes by the year 2030

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Diabetes Mellitus

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  1. Diabetes Mellitus Epidemiology/Risk Factors

  2. Epidemiology • It’s estimated that there were 30 million cases in 1985 to 285 million in 2010. • International Diabetes Federation projects that 438 million individuals will have diabetes by the year 2030 • Prevalence of Type 1 and Type 2 are both increasing but Type 2 is increasing at a faster rate due to: • increasing numbers of obesity • Reduced activity levels • Aging population

  3. Statistics • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated that 25.8 million personsor 8.3% of the population had diabetes • ***27% of the individuals with diabetes were undiagnosed). • 1.6 million individuals (>20 years) were newly diagnosed with diabetes in 2010. • In 2007, DM ,7th leading cause of death • 5th leading cause of death worldwide

  4. Statistics • 2010, the prevalence of DM in the United States • 0.2% in individuals aged <20 years • 11.3% in individuals aged >20 years • >65 yo, the prevalence of DM was 26.9%. • Similar prevalence both genders: (of individuals aged >20 years) • M 11.8% • F 10.8% By 2030 the greatest number of individuals with diabetes will be aged 45–64 years, worldwide!

  5. Risk Factors Type 1 • Largely unknown; microbial, chemical, dietary, other • Human leukocyte antigen associations • Higher incidence of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) types DR3, DR4 • Usually <30 yr, particularly childhood and adolescence, but any age • Associated diseases: Autoimmune; Graves’ disease, Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, vitiligo, Addison’s disease, pernicious anemia

  6. Risk Factors Type 2 • Age( Usually >40 yo, but any age • obesity (central) • sedentary lifestyle • previous gestational diabetes • Diet: high carbohydrate content in food • Hereditary factors: 90% concordance rate in identical twins

  7. Diabetes Mellitus Pathophysiology

  8. Pancreas • Islets of Langerhans - 4 types of hormone secreting cells • alpha cells - secrete glucagon • beta cells - secrete insulin • delta cells - gastrin • F cells - secrete pancreatic polypeptide

  9. Diabetes Type 1 • Genetic susceptibility • HLA region on chromosome 6 • Autoimmunity • Autoantibodies that destroy islet/beta cells • Environmental factors • Viruses • Infecting or destroying beta cells • Triggering an autoimmune reaction against the beta cells

  10. Diabetes Type 2 • Genetic susceptibility • No autoimmune mechanisms • Insulin resistance • Impaired insulin secretion

  11. Diabetes Mellitus PMH/Family/Social History

  12. Past Medical History • PMH • Systemic hypertension • HDL < 35 • Severe Obesity • Visceral fat along the waist • Triglycerides > 250 • History of cardiovascular disease *All reasons to start screening for diabetes

  13. Past Medical History • Diabetes secondary to the following: • Hormonal excess: Cushing’s syndrome, acromegaly • Drugs: glucocorticoids, diuretics, BC pills • Pancreatic disease: Pancreatitis, Pancreatectomy • Gestational Diabetes (GDM)

  14. Family History • 1st degree relative with Diabetes • Mother w/ diabetes: 3% chance of developing • Father w/ diabetes: 6% chance of developing • Siblings with diabetes: 6% if 1 gene is shared, 12-25% if 2 genes are shared. • Identical Twins: If 1 twin has type 1, there is a 25-50% chance the other will develop it. • High-risk ethnic population

  15. Social History • Type 1: • Environmental factors such as viral infections. (coxsackie virus, mumps virus) • Type 2: • Obesity • Sedentary lifestyle • High carbohydrate intake

  16. Diabetes Mellitus Patient Symptoms/ PE Signs

  17. Type 1 Diabetes Symptoms • Polyuria • Polydyspia • polyphagia • Weight loss • Weakness/fatique • Noctural enuresis

  18. Type 1 Diabetes PE Signs • Young • Lean/wasted • Dehydration- loss of turgor • Insulin decreased to absent • Increased glucagon in blood • Ketoacids in urine

  19. Type 2 Diabetes Symptoms • Asymptomatic initially • Polyuria (less than type 1) • Recurrent blurred vision • Peripheral neuropathy • Weakness and fatigue (less than Type 1) • Chronic skin infections

  20. Type 2 Diabetes PE Signs • Adults (not always) • Obese or overweight • Localization of fat deposits around abdomen, chest, neck • High waist circumference • Hyperpigmentation of back of neck, axilla and groin • Increased glucagon and insulin in blood

  21. Diabetes Mellitus Labs/Differential Diagnoses/ Complications

  22. Labs • Fasting Plasma Glucose • Normal: <100mg/dL • Prediabetic: 100-125 mg/dl • Hemoglobin A1C • Normal 5.6% • Impaired 5.7-6.4% • Oral Glucose Tolerance Test • Normal 140 mg/dL • Prediabetic 140-199 mg/dl

  23. Labs • Lipid Profile • BUN (blood urea nitrogen) • Creatinine • Urinalysis • Microalbumin

  24. DDX • Cushing Syndrome • Acromegally • Metabolic Acidosis • Renal Glycosuria • Drug-induced glucose intolerance • Pancreatic insufficiency

  25. Complications • Ketoacidosis • Infections • Nephropathy • Retinopathy • Neuropathy • Diabetic Feet • Cardiovascular Disease • Hyperlipidemia

  26. Complications • Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA) • Usually in insulin-dependent DM • Not enough insulin to meet body’s needs • Ketogenesis • metabolic acidosis • Osmotic diuresis (increase in urine volume) • dehydration

  27. Complications • Greater risk for Infections • CAP • Influenza • Cholecystitis • UTI • Fungal infections (candidiasis, eye, skin)

  28. Complications • Nephropathy • Higher incidence in Type 1 • higher prevalence in Type 2 • Most common cause of ESRD *Risk factors: • Poor glycemic control • Smoking • HTN

  29. Complications • Retinopathy • 20% Type 2 show signs at diagnosis • Small retinal hemorrhages • Extensive growth of new vessels (progressive) • Retina • Vitreous humor • Increased risk with higher HgbA1C and with longer duration of DM

  30. Complications • Neuropathy (Peripheral) • Loss of sensation/pain in extremities (feet) • Begins in toes and eventually legs, fingers, arms • Major cause of foot problems in these pts

  31. Complications • Diabetic Feet • Leading NON-traumatic cause of foot amputation in US due to: • Neuropathy • Vasculopathy • Ulcers • 15% of diabetics have foot ulcers • Of those, 20% of ulcers will lead to an amputation

  32. Complications • Hyperlipidemia • Type 2 pts have TRIAD: • Increased LDL • Increased triglycerides • Decreased HDL

  33. Complications • Cardiovascular Disease • Leading cause of death in DM pts • Men have 2x risk for MI • Women 4-5x risk for MI • Increased incidence of plaque rupture, thrombosis, in-hospital mortality

  34. Diabetes Mellitus Treatment

  35. Oral Medications • Metformin (Glucophage)- typically twice a day  side effect diarrhea • Metformin ER- one daily • Sulfonylureas (Glimepiride, Glipizide, Glyburide)- 1-2x daily  side effect hypoglycemia • Prandin, Starlix- taken with meals • Actos- one daily • Januvia, Onglyza, Tradjenta- one daily • Bile acid sequestrants- Welchol • Combination pills

  36. Insulin • Fast Acting: taken before meals (0-15 mins) set dose before meals or sliding scale • Novolog, Humalog, Apidra • Long Acting: taken in am/ at night or both • Lantus, Levemir • Mixes: Both fast acting and long acting agent--taken typically before 2 largest meals (breakfast and dinner) • Humalog Mix 75/25, Novolog Mix 70/30, Humalog Mix 50/50

  37. Injectable Hormones • Victoza- once daily • Byetta- twice daily • Bydureon- new similar to Byetta once a week • Symlin- three times daily • Side effects of all include nausea

  38. Insulin Pumps • 24 hour insulin- basal rate • Bolus- for food intake • Medtronic • Animas • One Touch Ping • Omni-Pod- no tubing CGMS- Continuous Glucose Monitoring System: measures BG every 5 min.

  39. Blood Glucose Monitoring • Monitor blood glucose- number of times daily varies depending on patient

  40. Patient Education • Healthy diet • Exercise • Foot care- diabetic shoes • Annual Eye exam- retinopathy • Stress Testing, EKG, ECHO • Ideal blood glucose range • Treatment of low and high blood glucose • Use of Glucagon- for severe hypoglycemia

  41. Sources • Current Medical Dx & Tx • Ferri’s Clinical Advisor • UpToDate • Harrison’s Principles of Internal Med.

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