Pathophysiology
Diagnostic Studies
Clinical Manifestations
Medications
Nursing Process
100

What is Diabetes a disorder of?

Glucose Metabolism

100

Usually performed first thing in the morning before breakfast, only drink water before test

Fasting Plasma Glucose (fpg)

100

Most prevalent form of diabetes

Type 2 Mellitus

100

This form of medication is out of the body in 2.5-3 hours, peaks around 60 minutes and it not a substitute for long-acting insulin

Inhaled Insulin

100

This person determines nutrition needs based on weight, lifestyle, medication.

Registered Dietician

200

List 3 types of diabetes

Type I, Type II Mellitus, Gestational

200

Measures average blood glucose for the past 2-3 months, don't have to fast before

Hemoglobin AIC


200

Symptoms of this form are: rapid onset; polyuria, polydipsia and polyphagia; weight loss may occur

Type 1

200

This medication works about 10-30 minutes after administration and peaks 30 minutes to 3 hours after the injection and lasts 3-5 hours

Rapid-Acting Insulin

200

This physician is head of the diabetes team, and is seen for general checkups and illnesses.

General Doctor or PCP

300

Diabetes is related to ________, autoimmune and environmental factors.

Genetic

300

2 hours long, checks levels before and after a sweet drink to show how the body processes glucose

Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT)

300

Onset of this type is typically gradual with few apparent symptoms and hyperglycemia

Type 2

300

This form of medication usually reaches the bloodstream several hours after the injection, lowers blood glucose levels slowly, but evenly over a 24 hour period

Long-Acting Insulin

300

This person's role in collaborative care is to care for and teach and can also help with day-to-day aspects of living with diabetes.

Nurse

400

Where are beta cells secreted?

Pancreas

400

Checks blood glucose level at any time of the day when symptoms are present

Casual or Random Plasma Glucose Test

400

What type is caused by autoimmune destruction of the beta cells in the pancreas that secrete insulin?

Type 1

400

This form of medication starts working around 1.5-4 hours after the injection, peaks 4-12 hours later.

Intermediate-Acting Insulin

400

This type of physician should be seen once a year.

Eye Doctor; Podiatrist

500

Where is stored glucose released from when levels fall?

liver


500

What should the result be for a Casual Plasma Glucose Test to confirm diabetes?

200 or more mg/dL

500

Defined as impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), impaired fasting glucose (IFG)

Prediabetes

500

This form is taken 30 minutes before eating, peaks in 2-5 hours

Regular Insulin

500

This person is a registered nurse with additional training in diabetes.

Certified Diabetes Educator