Diagnosis/Goals
DKA
Complications
Medications
Medications
100

Three ways to diagnose diabetes

A1c greater than or equal to 6.5%

Random sugar >200

Fasting sugar of 126


100

What are the therapeutic endpoints in the treatment of (1) DKA and (2) HHS?

(1) DKA: Closure of the anion gap

(2) HHS: Normalization of serum osmolarity

100

This type of ENT infection is almost exclusively seen in diabetics

Malignant Otitis Externa caused by pseudomonas

100

What kidney protecting medications should be used in diabetic patients with microalbuminuria when not contraindicated?

Ace inhibitors and ARBs

100

What class of medications reduces the risk of worsening heart failure or heart failure related hospitalizations?

SGLT2 inhibitors

200

What are exercise goals?

150 min of moderate exercise per week 
200

What are the five umbrella causes of DKA and HHS?

 Five ā€œI’sā€: (1) Infection (2) Inflammation/Injury (3) Infarction (4) Intoxication (5) Iatrogenic

200

This class of medications is generally contraindicated in diabetics with CHF

TZDs (pioglitazone)

200

What 2 medication classes have a benefit of weight loss in addition to glucose lowering?

GLP1 receptor agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors

200

What are the two main side effects that limit use of sulfonylureas?

hypoglycemia and weight gain

300

How often should A1c be checked?

Well-controlled: every 6 months

Uncontrolled: every 3 months

300

What are the three main elements of DKA/HHS management?

(1) Fluid resuscitation and repletion 

(2) Insulin treatment

(3) Potassium correction/monitoring

 

300

This diabetic medication may contribute to neuropathy found in diabetics 

Bonus: why?

Metformin

Reduces B12 absorption

300

What is the major risk and contraindication to using GLP1 agonists?

Risk of thyroid C-cell tumors.

contraindicated in patients with personal or family history of thyroid cancers

300

What other 3 disease states/concerns can diabetes medications improve?

cardiovascular disease/heart failure, chronic kidney disease, obesity

400

Name 3 labs that should be drawn at initial diagnosis visit

BMP, TSH, CBC, lipids, microalbumin

400

What is the average level of dehydration (fluid deficit) in HHS?

 100 mL/kg or 7-10 L

400

These 2 medications have FDA approval for diabetic neuropathy

Duloxetine and pregabalin

400

What is the first line glucose lowering medication for most type 2 diabetic patients unless contraindicated?


What are the renal cutoffs for starting and stopping the medication?

Metformin

Dont use when eGFR < 45

Discontinue when eGFR < 30

400

What is the preferred way of initiating insulin and at what dose?


Start basal insulin at 10 units/day or 0.1-0.2 units/kg/day


500

Name 3 things (besides labs) that should be done at diagnosis

Immunizations

Diabetic Education

Set goals

Diabetic foot exam

Diabetic Testing Supplies

500

What is the underlying pathophysiologic process driving both DKA and HHS?

Unopposed glucagon (and other counterregulatory hormone) signaling during a metabolic stress state in the setting of insulin deficiency or inadequacy.

500

This class of medications should be used in patients with CKD who cannot take SGLT-2 inhibitors to reduce progression and CV risk

Minerlocorticoid receptor antagonists (finerenone)

500

Name the insulin secretors and insulin sensitizers

Insulin secretors: sulfonylureas, GLP1 agonists, DPP4 inhibitors

Insulin sensitizers: metformin and TZDs


500

At what A1c do we go right to insulin therapy?

Rank the 4 insulin options from quickest to slowest onset 

A1c > or equal to 10

Rapid acting, regular insulin, NPH insulin, and long acting insulin