Wednesday, 15 June 2016


Hypoglycemia in Type 2 Diabetes

  1. Hypoglycemia symptoms are common in type 2 diabetes (38% of patients in one study)
  2. Associated with:
    • Increased morbidity and mortality
    • Reduced quality of life
    • Reduced treatment satisfaction
    • Increased barriers to adherence
    • More common at A1C < 7%

When Does Non-Severe Hypoglycemia Occur with Diabetes?



1/5 of all non-severe hypoglycemia occurs nocturnally



Symptoms of Hypoglycemia
  1. Focal
  • Blurred or double vision
  • Slurred speech
  • Paresthesias
  • Tinnitus
  • Hemiplegia


  1. Neuroglycopenic Symptoms
Difficulty thinking
Confusion
Poor coordination
Headache
Hunger*
Weakness*
Dizziness
Faintness
Drowsiness
Irritability
Nightmares
Abnormal or belligerent behavior
Somnolence
Seizures
Coma


*These symptoms are sometimes classified as autonomic


Thresholds in Response to Hypoglycemia in Normal Subjects

Plasma Glucose
Clinical Response
<60
diaphoresis, anxiety, palpitations, hunger, tremor
<55
early cognitive dysfunction
<50
lethargy and obtundation
<30
coma
<20
convulsions, death


Plasma Glucose
Hormonal Response
<80
insulin secretion suppressed
<70
glucagon and epinephrine increased
<60
growth hormone and cortisol increased

Impaired Counterregulation in Type 1 Diabetes

  • Deficient glucagon response to hypoglycemia
  • Deficient epinephrine response to hypoglycemia (“HYPOGLYCEMIC UNAWARENESS”)
  • Patients with diminished glucagon and epinephrine response have a 25 fold increase in the frequency of severe hypoglycemia
  • Sleep further impairs epinephrine response to hypoglycemia


Potential Complications of Hypoglycemia

Central Nervous System
  • Cognitive Dysfunction
  • Intellectual Decline
  • Coma
  • Brain Damage
  • Seizure
  • Focal Neurological Lesions (Rare)
  • TIA, Stroke

Heart
  • Cardiac arrhythmias
  • Myocardial ischemia

Eye
  • Vitreous Hemorrhage
  • Worsening of retinopathy?

Other
  • Falls
  • Accidents with injury

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