Complications of Diabetes Mellitus Type 1
Complications of Diabetes Mellitus Type 1
Complications of Diabetes Mellitus Type 1
Atherosclerosis
Cerebrovascular disease
o Microvascular complications
Peripheral neuropathy
Diabetic nephropathy
o Miscellaneous complications
Skin infections
Necrobiosis lipoidica
Hypoglycemia
o This may be due to change in insulin dose, a small or missed
meal, or strenuous exercise. Common symptoms are lightheadedness, dizziness, confusion, shakiness, sweating, and
headache.
o Patients should be educated about symptoms of hypoglycemia
and to respond rapidly with sugar intake. These patients
should be advised to carry candy or sugar cubes. Family
members can be taught to administer a subcutaneous
injection of glucagon. In emergency, initial treatment is a
bolus injection of 25 mL of 50% glucose solution followed by a
continuous glucose infusion.
o The dawn phenomenon is the normal tendency of the blood
glucose to rise in the early morning before breakfast. This rise
in glucose, which may be due to the nocturnal spikes in
growth hormone causing insulin resistance, is probably
enhanced by increased hepatic gluconeogenesis secondary to
the diurnal rise in serum cortisol. However, in some patients,
nocturnal hypoglycemia may be followed by a marked
increase in fasting plasma glucose with an increase in plasma
ketones (Somogyi phenomenon). Thus, both the dawn and
Somogyi
phenomena
are
characterized
by
morning
hyperglycemia, but the latter is due to rebound (counterregulation) hyperglycemia. In cases of dawn phenomenon, the
patient should check blood glucose levels at 2-4 am. The dawn
and
Somogyi
phenomena
can
be
ameliorated
by
and
induration.
These
complications
are
less
insulin
after
allergy
the
is
injection
rare.
and
Symptoms
include
occur
urticaria,
Diabetic ketoacidosis
o DKA is acute metabolic changes in the body due to lack of
insulin or poor response to insulin due to stress or illness. It is
characterized by hyperglycemia, ketosis, and acidosis, leading
to osmotic diuresis and dehydration.
o The key to treatment of DKA is volume repletion, insulin
therapy, and specific metabolic corrections.
Macrovascular
complications
(ie,
atherosclerosis):
People
with
Atherosclerosis
of
the
internal
carotid
and
Microvascular disease
complications.
Hyaline
arteriosclerosis,
the
kidneys,
nephropathy,
this
which
wall
is
thickening
characterized
leads
by
to
diabetic
proteinuria,
vessel
abnormality
leading
to
hard
exudates,
are
due
to
axonal
degeneration
and
segmental
Controlling blood glucose, Hb A1c, lipids, blood pressure, and weight are
important prognostic factors and predict the development of long-term
macrovascular and microvascular complications. More than 60% of
patients with type 1 DM fare reasonably well over the long term. Many of
the rest develop blindness, end-stage renal disease, and, in some cases,
early death. If a patient with type 1 DM survives the period 10-20 years
after onset of disease without fulminant complications, he or she has a
high probability of reasonably good health. Other factors affecting longterm outcomes are the patients education, awareness, motivation, and
intelligence level.