Managing Insulin Therapy Flashcards

1
Q

Insulin peaks

A

around meal time

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2
Q

Mixed Insulin

A

Combination of SA with longer-acting NPH-like insulin in one injection

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3
Q

Mixed advantage

A

Advantage: decreases number of shots potentially while providing both types of insulin coverage

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4
Q

Mixed disadvantage

A

Disadvantage: Harder to fine-tune

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5
Q

Types of mix

A

70/30: Aspart (Novalog) Mix: 70% insulin aspart protamine (likeNPH), 30% aspart (like Novalog)
50/50 Humalog Mix: 50% insulin lispro protamine (like NPH), 50% lispro (Humalog)
70/30 Regular Mix: 70% NPH, 30% Regular

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6
Q

clinical indications for insulin type 1

A

Diabetes Mellitus
Evidence of ongoing catabolism (weight loss)
Symptoms of hyperglycemia are present

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7
Q

Clincial indications for insulin type 2

A

◦ A1c>10%
◦ Blood glucose levels (≥300 mg/dL)

◦ Consider:
◦ Effect of treatment on cardiovascular and renal comorbidities, efficacy, hypoglycemia risk, impact on weight, cost, risk for
side effects, and patient preferences
◦ GLP-1 Agonist or SGLT-2 Cotransporter may be preferable

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8
Q

Administer 50% of daily insulin as ___ and 50% as ____*.

A

basal (throughout the day)

prandail (meail time

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9
Q

Total daily insulin requirements can be estimated based on weight give details amounts regardin this

A

◦ Typical doses range from 0.3* to 1.0 units/kg/day

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10
Q

higher doses are requried during

A

puberty, pregnancy, and medical illness.

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11
Q

The American Diabetes Association/JDRF Type 1 Diabetes Sourcebook notes

A

0.5 units/kg/day as a typical starting dose in patients with type 1 diabetes who
are metabolically stable
◦ half administered as prandial insulin given to control blood glucose after meals and the other half as basal insulin to control glycemia in the periods between meal absorption

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12
Q

Multidose regimens for patients with type 1 diabetes combine

A

emeal use of shorter-acting insulins with a longer-acting formulation,
usually at night

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13
Q

Patient should have

A

regimen closest to physiologic insulin pattern
Patient needs to have emergency plan for hypoglycemia
Patient needs to have “sick day” plan when oral intake is compromised

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14
Q

Each 15 gm CHO serving raises BG approximately

A

50 mg/dL.

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15
Q

1 unit bolus of insulin lowers glucose approximately

A

20 to 60

mg/dL.

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16
Q

The rule of 1,500 enables the provider to find

A

the CF or how much 1 unit of insulin will lower
blood glucose for high blood glucose levels (usually >140 to 150 mg/dL). First, calculate the
total daily dose (TDD) of insulin as basal + bolus—about 50% of each. Then divide 1,500 by
the TDD. For example, 1,500 divided by 30 units per day of insulin equals 50. One unit of
short-acting insulin will drop glucose 50 mg/dL. For rapid-acting insulin, use 1,800 as the
basis for calculation.

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17
Q

The rule of 500 enables the provider to find the

A

I:C ratio. Divide 500 by the TDD. For
example, 500 divided by 30 units per day of insulin equals 16.7 One unit of insulin will
manage 16 to 17 g of CHO. For ease of use, round to 1 unit equals 15 g (Scheiner, 2017)

18
Q

• The correction factor (CF) and insulin to

A

carbohydrate (CHO) ratio (I:C) for patients with

either type 1 or 2 DM taking insulin.

19
Q

Dosing: 50% bolus, 50% basal needs

◦ Depends on

A
blood gas (BG) levels, diet, exercise, weight
◦ Based on type of DM, type of insulin, calories, exercise
◦ Average insulin doses: 0.3 to 0.8 units/kg/24 hours
20
Q

◦ Example: 60 kg adult type 1 DM (using 0.5 units/ kg/24
hours)
◦ Requires

A

30 units
◦ Insulin glargine (Lantus): 15 units at bedtime
◦ Insulin Lispro: 15 units total divided over meals
◦ Before breakfast: 5 units
◦ Before lunch: 5 units
◦ Before dinner: 5 units

21
Q

Must understand:

A

◦ Insulin regimen: onset, peak, duration of action of insulins uses
◦ Glucose level goals
◦ Process of titration
◦ Patient’s lifestyles and eating habits

22
Q

Three Basic Regimens

A

◦ Once daily intermediate-acting or long-acting; usually given at HS
◦ Twice daily pre-mixed: am and at evening or HS (pre-mixed fixed ration SA and LA)
◦ Basal-bolus: 3 daily injections of rapid or SA with meals and 1-2 injections intermediate or LA
(basal) insulin

23
Q

Review BG log: 3-4 days worth of data minimum

A

◦ Typically am glucose, before lunch and evening meal, before bed
◦ If post-prandial readings added: do 2 h after meals
◦ Identify individual patient glycemic goals
◦ Look for patterns
◦ Note levels that fall outside of target range
◦ Attend to hypoglycemia first

24
Q

◦ Short- and rapid-acting insulin — adjust by no more

A

than two units (or 10 per cent of the current dose) daily

25
Q

intermediate-acting, long-acting and pre-mixed insulin — adjust by no more

A

than two units, or 10 per cent

(whichever is greater), every three to four days

26
Q

If patient takes more than 1

A

type of insulin, adjust one type at a time

27
Q

Clinical signals that may prompt evaluation of overbasalization include

A

◦ Basal dose more than ∼0.5 IU/kg
◦ High bedtime-morning or post-preprandial glucose differential
◦ Hypoglycemia (aware or unaware)
◦ High variability in BS
◦ Indication of overbasalization should prompt reevaluation to further individualize therapy

28
Q

V GO: Basal-bolus disposable insulin delivery device (type 2) Basal and bolus information

A

◦ Basal: 20,30,40 units/d

◦ Bolus: each push 2 Units

29
Q

Pramlintide is based on the naturally occurring β-cell peptide amylin
◦ Studies show

A

variable reductions of A1C (0–0.3%) and body weight (1–2 kg) with addition of
pramlintide to insulin

30
Q

Metformin

◦ small reductions

A

in body weight and lipid levels but did not improve A1C (

31
Q

GLP-1 agonists

◦ small (0.2%) reductions in

A

n A1C compared with insulin alone in people with type 1 diabetes and also
reduced body weight by ∼3 kg

32
Q

Sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2)

◦ improvements in

A

A1C and body weight

◦ two- to fourfold increase in ketoacidosis

33
Q

•14.16 Insulin should be used for management of type 1 diabetes in

A

A Insulin

is the preferred agent for the management of type 2 diabetes in pregnancy. E

34
Q

Either multiple daily injections or insulin pump technology can be used in

A

pregnancy complicated by type 1 diabetes. C

35
Q

Insulin resistance decreases dramatically immediately

A

postpartum, and insulin
requirements need to be evaluated and adjusted as they are often roughly half the
prepregnancy requirements for the initial few

36
Q

Level 1 hypoglycemia is defined as a

A

a measurable glucose concentration <70 mg/dL (3.9

mmol/L) but ≥54 mg/dL (3.0 mmol/L).

37
Q

Level 2 hypoglycemia (defined as a blood glucose concentration

A

<54 mg/dL [3.0 mmol/L]) is
the threshold at which neuroglycopenic symptoms begin to occur and requires immediate
action to resolve the hypoglycemic event

38
Q

Level 3 hypoglycemia is defined as a severe

A

event characterized by altered mental and/or

physical functioning that requires assistance from another person for recovery.

39
Q

treatment ffor hypoglycemia

A

◦ Tablets, gel tube, injectable (sc), nasal puff
◦ 15-15 rule—15 grams of carbohydrate to raise blood sugar and check it after 15 minutes. If it’s still
below 70 mg/dL, repeat.

40
Q

Hypoglycemia unawareness occurs more frequently in those who:

A

• Frequently have low blood sugar episodes (which can cause individual to stop sensing the early
warning signs of hypoglycemia).
• Have had diabetes for a long time.
• Tightly control their diabetes (which increases chances of having low blood sugar reactions).

41
Q

things that are helpful for hypoglycemia unawareness

A
  • CMG with alarm is helpful
  • Improved by avoiding hypoglycemia for several weeks
  • Increase target blood sugar
  • Accept higher A1c