education
nursing intervention
complications
labs/ meds
symptoms/ risk factors
100

define type 1 diabetes

- destruction of beta cells causing complete abscence of insulin. 

- glucose cannot enter the cell without insulin 

- increased glucose = damage

100

nursing dx for diabetes

- potential for impaired wound healing, injury, kidney disease, hypoglycemia, DKA, HHS, coma, death, 

- pain due to neuropathy

100

what are macrovascular complications

- accelerated/ abnormal lipid metabolism. Diseases of the large and medium size blood vessels with greater frequency and early onset 

- they include cerebrovascular, cardiovascular and peripheral vascular disease (HTN, stroke, low extremity amputation, infection)

100

what are some on going assessments for long term monitoring of diabetes? 

- glycosylated hemoglobin assays (Hgb A1C)

- glycosylated serum proteins and albumin

- kidney function tests 

100

causes of type 1 and type 2 diabetes 

type 1: autoimmune (celiac, graves), genetics (heredity), viruses, idiopathic

type 2: obesity, strong genetic disposition 

200

define diabetes type 2

- decreased insulin production and cellular insulin resistance

- hepatic overproduction of glucose since glucose cannot enter the cell 

200

how to treat potential problems for diabetes

- prevent injury from hyperglycemia: meds (insulin, PO), nutrition, exercise, transplant 

- neuropathy: footwear, screenings, mirrors

- pain: prevent injury from reduced vision, reduce risk of kidney disease, prevent hypoglycemia (glucose tabs, monitoring glucose) 

- prevent DKA and HHS: managing sick days 

200

earliest indicator of diabetic nephropathy and its risk factors/ tx

- DM is the leading cause of end stage renal disease with earliest indicator being microalbuminuria 

- risk factors: uncontrolled BG, HTN, hx of 5-10 years DM

- Tx: control BG and BP, ARBs, ACEs reduce level of albuminuria and rate of progression

200

what are the diagnostic tests for diabetes

- random: >200 any time of day AND has signs and symptoms of DM

- fasting: 8 hours preferred test >126 on 2 separate tests confirm diabetes (100-125 is pre diabetes) 


200

what is glucose intolerance

- abnormal change in response to elevated glucose of 100-125 fasting level

- insulin resistance "pre diabetes" should test A1C regularly and monitor for symptoms of diabetes such as polyuria, polyphagia, and polydipsia 

- hypercholesterolemia, obesity, hypertension

300

exercise with diabetics 

- increases blood glucose, wt. management, decreases stress and BP

- check glucose before and after, carry something that has glucose (10-15 carbs) 

- avoid exercise if glucose is >250 or <80 and wear ID bracelet

300

what makes up carbohydrates

- provide energy, fiber, vitamins and minerals

- sugar, starch and fiber raise blood glucose (alcohol) 

- CHO recommended from fruits, non starchy veggies, whole grains, legumes, low fat milk

- must watch total calories (fiber 21-25gm/day, 45-65% total calories from CHO) 

300

what occurs during diabetic retinopathy and which type gets it 

- nearly all type 1 diabetics will eventually have this. 

- blood vessels to retina are blocked, causing them to leak leading to retinal hypoxia, edema, retinal hemorrhages and hard exudates on the retina 

- blurred vision, early cataracts, estimated to be the most common cause of NEW cases of adult blindness

300

what are other forms of diagnosing diabetes

- urine ketones

- lipid, cholesterol, triglyceride levels

- serum and urine creatine levels

- urine for microalbuminuria/ doppler studies 

300

symptoms of type 1 vs type 2

type 1: 3 Ps, weight loss because the body cannot get glucose and turns to other energy sources such as fat and protein, fatigue, ketonuria, and SOMETIMES blurred vision (symptoms usually acute onset) 

type 2: fatigue, recurrent infections/ vaginal yeast/ candida, prolonged wound healing and visual changes

400

goals of a diabetic diet

type 1: consistency to attain normal levels

type 2: weight loss (5-7% of body weight)

- each patient's individual meal plan should be constructed with their lifestyle and goals in mind

- controls lipids to reduce heart disease, complications, address individual needs

400

protein in the diet with DM

- 20-35% of daily intake (same as non diabetics) 

- protein does not increase blood glucose

- diabetic with kidney disease needs to reduce protein intake 

400

what happens during diabetic neuropathy

- most common complication of diabetes. Nerve fibers damaged due to decreased blood flow

- sensory: pain and loss of sensation

- motor: foot deformities 

- autonomic neuropathy (impotence, neurogenic bladder, gastroparesis, cardiovascular) 

400

oral meds used for type 2 diabetics

- sulfonylurea (glipizide, glyburide) stimulates pancreas to produce insulin

- meglitinides (repaglinide) short acting, ^

- biguanides (metformin) decrease production of glucose by liver, increase tissue response to insulin

- alpha glucosidase inhibitor (acarbose) slows carbs digestion and absorption, take w first bite of food 

- thiazolidinediones (rosiglitazone) increase tissue sensitivity to insulin, causes fluid retention (caution with cardiac) monitor LFTs 

400

symptoms of absence of insulin

- hyperglycemia, ketone bodies, hemoconcentration, hypovolemia, hyper viscosity, hypoperfusion, hypoxia 

- acidosis, 3 Ps

500

educating patient on stress affecting blood sugar 

- ANS stimulates output of cortisol from adrenal cortex and epinephrine from medulla 

- epinephrine works quickly to increase HR and BP

- cortisol works slow to increase glucose availability to suppress cell mediated immunity

- chronic stress leads to hyperglycemia, HTN, increased LDL, accelerates atherosclerosis, suppresses immune system

500

fat in the diet as a diabetic

- dietary fat provides energy, carries fat-soluble vitamins and provides essential fatty acids

- <200mg a day in cholesterol, 20-35% of total calories <7% saturated

- 2 servings of fish per week 

500

wat happens during mixed vascular and neuropathic disease 

foot complications of micro and macro diseases placing patient at risk for injury and serious infection. Smoking makes it worse 

- leading cause of hospitalization (annual foot screening, daily inspection, appropriate foot wear)

500

ways to administer insulin and the types

- needle/vial, pen, pump, bolus, gtt (routines by subq, regular can be given IV when immediate onset of action is needed, insulin cannot be taken orally because it is inactivated by gastric juices) 

- rapid acting (lispro/humalog) , short acting (regular), intermediate (NPH), long acting (glargine/lantus), pre-mixed (humulin 70/30)

500

where is insulin stored

- secreted and stored in the beta cells of the islets of langerhans in the pancreas. It is transformed by the liver into active insulin

- insulin attaches to receptors on target cells where it promotes glucose transport into cells through cell membranes

- insulin is released continuously into blood stream in small increments, with larger amounts released after food