Define diabetes mellitus
Syndrome of chronic hyperglycemia due to relative insulin deficiency, resistance or both.
What types of complications are associated with diabetes
Hyperglycemia results in serious micro-vascular e.g. retinopathy (disease of the retina), nephropathy (deterioration of kidney function) and neuropathy (damage of peripheral nerves) or macrovascular e.g. strokes, renovascular disease, limb ischaemia and heart problems.
What are normal levels of blood glucose
Between 3.5-8mmol/L under all conditions
What is the main organ involved in glucose homeostasis and what is its role
The liver is the principal organ of glucose homeostasis:
How much glucose is produced everyday
About 200g of glucose is produced and utilised each day. More than 90% is derived from liver glycogen and hepatic gluconeogenesis and the remainder from renal gluconeogenesis.
Where is glucose utilised
Why is the brain so reliant on just glucose and no other energy forms
How is glucose utilised in muscles
Glucose taken up by muscle is stored as glycogen or metabolised to lactate or CO2 and H2O
How is glucose utilised in adipose tissue
What are the 2 main hormonal regulators of blood glucose levels
Insulin and glucagon
What are some of the roles of insulin
What is meant by bisphasic insulin release
B-cells can sense the rising glucose levels and aim to metabolise it
by releasing insulin - glucose levels are the major controlling factor
in insulin release!
What are some roles of glucagon
What are some other counter-regulatory hormones that are also involved in regulating blood glucose levels
How is insulin formed
What are the main roles of insulin in a fed and fasting state
Cell membranes are not inherently permeable to glucose so how does glucose get into the cells
A family of specialised glucose-transporter (GLUT) proteins carry glucose through the membrane and into cells.
How many types of GLUT are there what are their functions
What is the role of the insulin receptor in glucose transport
Diabetes can be primary or secondary to other conditions. What conditions might diabetes be secondary to
What are the types of primary diabetes
Where is Type 1 DM most prevalent
Most prevalent in Northern European countries, particularly Finland and the incidence is increasing in most populations
Define T1DM
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) is a metabolic disorder characterised by hyperglycaemia due to an absolute deficiency of insulin. This is caused by an autoimmune destruction of beta cells of the pancreas.
Describe the epidemiology of T1DM