1 / 34

Insulin Conundrums

Insulin Conundrums . Veronica Green. Risk reduction. Risk reduction for each 1% reduction in HbA1c in type 2 diabetes. Amputation or death due to peripheral vascular disease. Any diabetes- related endpoint. Microvascular complications. Myocardial infarction. Cataract extraction.

randy
Download Presentation

Insulin Conundrums

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Insulin Conundrums Veronica Green

  2. Risk reduction Risk reduction for each 1% reduction in HbA1c in type 2 diabetes Amputation or death due to peripheral vascular disease Any diabetes- related endpoint Microvascular complications Myocardial infarction Cataract extraction Heart failure 0 21% 37% 14% 19% 16% 43% -10 * ** Risk reduction (%) associated with a 1% lower HbA1c -20 * * *p < 0.0001 **p = 0.021 -30 * -40 * Epidemiological extrapolation showing benefit of a 1% reduction in mean HbA1c with a mean duration of diabetes of 10 years • Stratton IM et al. BMJ 2000; 321: 405–412.

  3. Standard approach to the management of Type 2 diabetes LifestyleChanges Oral Combination+glipins + Oral Monotherapy Treatment intensification Insulin Oral + exenatide / + Diet and Exercise V Green Byetta workshop 2

  4. When to start insulin?

  5. NICE • Hba1c >7.5% • Use NPH od/bd • Or long acting analogue if • Hypoglycaemia • Can’t do it themselves • Otherwise would need BD basal+orals • Hba1c >9% • Use BD biphasic • Use analogue mix if • Marked post prandial raise • Need to inject immediately pre-meals • hypos NICE 2009

  6. Or Not • NPH ½ price of analogue long acting insulin but • 20% variability in absorption with each injection • iFriedburg SJ, Lam YWF, Blum JJ, Gregerman RI. 2006. Insulin absorption: a major factor in apparent insulin resistance and the control of type 2 diabetes. Metabolism. 55(5) 614-619

  7. Who is Afraid of What?

  8. Taking the Fear out of Insulin Injections

  9. Doctor’s Fears Will I do my patient any good? Will their complications worsen? Will it make a difference to the blood glucose levels? Will they put on more weight?

  10. Nurse’s Fears Can this person learn to inject? Is it going to make a difference? What insulin to use? Am I able and competent to do this? What if something goes wrong?

  11. Patient’s Fears Will this make me a drug addict? What about my lifestyle? Fear of hypos My diabetes mild, I don’t need insulin Needle phobia

  12. Needles

  13. Injection sites

  14. Effect on Lifestyle • Find out about work, social life BEFORE deciding on a regime • Adapt the regime about the life not the other way round.

  15. Insulins

  16. Rapid Acting Analogues • Work almost straight away • Last 3-5 hours • Used pre/post prandially • NovoRapid , Humalog, Apidra

  17. Short Acting Insulins • Act 30 minutes post injection • Last 6-8 hours • Given pre prandially • Actrapid or Humulin S

  18. Intermediate Acting Insulins • Act after 1-2 hours • Last 12-14 hours • Given morning/evening or bedtime • Insulatard or Humulin I

  19. Pre Mixed Insulins • Act after 30 minutes, last 12-14 hours • Given morning and evening pre meal • Mixtard, Humulin M • Mixed analogues – NovoMix 30, Humalog Mix 25, 50

  20. Long Acting Analogues • Act immediately • Last 18-24 hours • Given am or pm • Lantus or Levemir

  21. Hypoglycaemia

  22. Classification • Mild – can be treated by the person themselves without help • Moderate – Need help in treating, but are conscious • Severe – Pt unable to help themselves, need of hospital care

  23. Neuro-glycopenic Confusion Drowsiness Speech difficulty Poor coordination Atypical behaviour Diplopia Autonomic Sweating / pale Palpitations Shaking (tremor) Hunger Symptoms

  24. Other signs • Malaise • Headache • Hemiplegia (particularly in the elderly) • Person may have individual signs e.g. numb lips

  25. Nocturnal hypoglycaemia 1 • Effects 30-40% of all diabetics • Can be slept through • The person may only be aware the next morning that they have had a hypo

  26. Nocturnal hypos 2 • Nightmares / vivid dreams • Waking up unrested • Waking up with a headache • High fasting sugar (often alternating with OK ones)

  27. Hypo Unawareness • Loss of bodily warning signs • Can cause severe hypos • Caused by • Running very tightly • Frequent hypos • Duration of diabetes

  28. 72 hour continuous glucose monitoring

  29. Physiology BG<3 Neuroglycopenic symptoms Autonomic symptoms Treat with glucose Release of glucagon, + stress hormones Glucogenolysis, gluconeogenesis (liver/kidney) Raise in BG

  30. Treatment • 20g glucose • Back up long acting carbohydrate • Find the cause • Adjust medication if required

  31. Causes • Too much insulin / OHA • Too little food • Timing of injection in relation to food • Alcohol • Exercise • Injection site problems • Hot weather

  32. Lipohypertrophy

  33. Case Histories

More Related