MFAC1521 Lecture 8: MFAC1521 (BGDA) SGS 7&8 Lesson Notes

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21/5 SGS 7 Gestational Diabetes
About diabetes:
Normal regulation of blood glucose is via a negative feedback loop (homeostasis)
Too high: insulin is secreted, glucose is converted to glycogen -> return to normal
Too low: glucagon secreted, glycogen converted to glucose -> return to normal levels
Type 1 = autoimmune disease -> absolute deficiency; beta cells are destroyed ->
hereditary/genetic disorder -> often diagnosed in children, not associated with obesity, treated
with regular insulin injections, cannot be prevented
Type 2 = insulin resistance -> relative deficiency; desensitisation of beta cells -> high BP, high
sugar diet, lack of physical activity (poor lifestyle habits), obesity, genetic predisposition ->
usually diagnosed in adults, associated with obesity, usually treatable with improving diet and
undergoing exercise, oral medication can be taken, can be prevent
Type 2 diabetes is not a single gene disorder, but rather polygenic -> gene variants may be
inherited from parents which puts child at risk, but does not give child the disease (genetic
predisposition but is not a mendelian inheritance)-> it is developed with other factors/stresses
Type 2 is more prevalent in australia (85%)
Symptoms
- increased thirst, fatigue, persistent infections, slow healing of wounds
Testing
traditionally by measuring blood glucose conc -> blood sample taken after fasting
oral glucose tolerance -> fasting -> followed by ingestion of 75g of glucose -> monitored to see
how blood glucose conc changes
gylcated haemoglobin (most common) -> non fasting -> glucose molecule is attached to rbc ->
more glucose in blood means more attachment to rbc; consider anaemic individuals (less
accurate)
Prevention
Type 1cannot be prevented
Type 2 is preventable with lifestyle changes, manageable
Certain people are at higher predisposed risk and need to be more careful
Associated complications
CVS disease -> stroke
sleep apnea -> associated with obesity, and not caused by diabetes
hearing loss
retinopathy
renal failure
nervous damage -> diabetes neuropathy
Reduced wound healing -> limb complications -> may require amputation
Impairment of phagocytes -> higher risk of other infections (opportunistic)
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Document Summary

Normal regulation of blood glucose is via a negative feedback loop (homeostasis) Too high: insulin is secreted, glucose is converted to glycogen -> return to normal. Increased thirst, fatigue, persistent infections, slow healing of wounds. Prevention: type 1cannot be prevented, type 2 is preventable with lifestyle changes, manageable, certain people are at higher predisposed risk and need to be more careful. Associated complications: cvs disease -> stroke, sleep apnea -> associated with obesity, and not caused by diabetes, hearing loss, retinopathy, renal failure, nervous damage -> diabetes neuropathy, reduced wound healing -> limb complications -> may require amputation. Impairment of phagocytes -> higher risk of other infections (opportunistic) Galactosaemia: 2 in nsw around 80,000 births/year, so around 2 are diagnosed with it, due to the deficiency of the galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase (gal-1-put) enzyme in 40,000 births activity in all cells. 3 types of this disease have been found, with mutations in the gale,

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