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Tips for the revision period:

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Try several revision techniques. Don't drink too much coffee/drugs. Regular moderate exercise Walk, Yoga, tai chi etc. improve your concentration ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tips for the revision period:


1
Tips for the revision period
  • Leave plenty of time to revise
  • Develop a timetable
  • Take short breaks.
  • Try several revision techniques
  • Don't drink too much coffee/drugs
  • Regular moderate exercise Walk, Yoga, tai chi
    etc. improve your concentration levels and help
    you to sleep better.

2
Pathology of Diabetes
  • Dr. Venkatesh M. Shashidhar
  • Senior Lecturer in Pathology
  • Fiji School of Medicine

3
Introduction
  • Diabetes mellitus (sweet urine)
  • 3 of world population, 100 million people
  • Commonest non communicable disease
  • High Morbidity mortality

4
Diabetes Mellitus
  • Disorder of metabolism (Carb, Prot Fat)
  • Due to Absolute or relative deficiency of
    insulin.
  • Characterized by hyperglycemia.
  • Clinically Polyuria, Polydypsia, Polyphagia.

5
Classification
  • Primary DM.
  • Type I IDDM / Juvenile 10.
  • Type II NIDDM /Adult onset 80.
  • MODY 5 maturity onset - young - Genetic
  • Secondary DM islet destruction.
  • Infectious congenital rubella, CMV.
  • Pancreatitis/tumors/Hemochromatosis.
  • Endocrinopathy, gestational DM, downs.
  • Drugs Corticosteroids.

6
Normal Pancreatic Islets
ß cells Glucagon cells
7
Pathogenesis of Type I DM
Environment ? Viral infe..??
Genetic HLA-DR3/DR4
Autoimmune Insulitis
ß cell Destruction
Severe Insulin deficiency
Type I DM
8
Pathogenesis of Type II DM
Environment Obesity ???
ß cell defect Genetic
Insulin resistance
Abnormal Secretion
Relative Insulin Def.
ß cell exhaustion
IDDM
Type II DM
9
Type-I Type-II
  • Age lt 40 Years
  • Duration Weeks
  • Ketonuria Common
  • Insulin- Dependent
  • Autoantibody Yes
  • Family History No
  • Insulin levels very low
  • Islets Insulitis
  • Complications
  • Acute Metabolic
  • gt 40 Years
  • Months to years
  • Rare
  • Independent
  • No
  • Yes
  • Normal or high
  • Normal / Exhaustion
  • Complications
  • Late and vascular.

10
Insulitis Type I
Insulinitis
11
Islets in Type II Diabetes
  • Loss of ß cells
  • Amyloid deposits
  • Hyalinization

12
Complications
  • Short term Complications (metabolic)
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Diabetic Ketoacidosis
  • Non Ketotic hyperosmolar diabetic coma
  • Lactic acidosis
  • Long term Complications(microangiopathy)
  • Angiopathy, Retinopathy, Nephropathy, Neurophathy

13
Pathogenesis of Microangiopathy
  • Long standing diabetes
  • Combination of glucose with proteins -
    Particularly collagen in blood vessels -
    Glycosylation.
  • Excess deposition of glycosylated type IV
    collagen in the basement membrane
  • Thick and Leaky blood vessels.
  • Chronic Ischemia protein loss into tissues.
  • Organ damage...

14
Microangiopathy
15
Long term Complications
  • Angiopathy
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Hyaline arteriolosclerosis
  • Diabetic microangiopathy
  • Nephropathy
  • Nodular glomerulosclerosis
  • Retinopathy
  • Non Proliferative Proliferative
  • Neuropathy
  • Peripheral axonal neuropathy

16
Neuropathy
17
Diabetic Gangrene
18
Candidiasis
19
Pathogenesis of Retinopathy
20
Normal Retina
21
Diabetic Retinopathy
Cotton wool spots
22
Proliferative Retinitis
  • Neovascularization
  • Haemorrhagia
  • Fibroplasia
  • Retinal detachment
  • Laser cauterization

23
Pathogenesis of Nephropathy
24
Diabetic Glomerulosclerosis
25
Laboratory Diagnosis
  • Urine glucose - dip-stick Screening
  • Random or fasting blood glucose (lt11)
  • Fasting gt 7mmol, Random gt11mmol
  • If Fasting level is between 7-11 then OGTT
  • HbA1c - for follow-up, not for diagnosis
  • Fructosamine - for long term maintenance.

26
Points to remember
  • Type-I - Acute Metabolic complications
  • Ketoacidosis.
  • Type-II - Chronic Vascular complications
  • Microangiopathy Kidney,Retina,Brain, BV.
  • Hypoglycemia is more dangerous. Not hyper
  • Infections are due to microangiopathy and
    ischemia, immuno suppression and hyperglycemia.
    (not just hyperglycemia)

27
Tips for the exam itself
  • Avoid panic. Panicking will just make it harder
  • close your eyes and take several long, slow deep
    breaths.
  • mentally repeating "I am calm and relaxed" or "I
    know I will do fine".
  • If you still can't remember the information then
    move on to another question and return to this
    question later.
  • don't spend endless time criticising yourself for
    where you think you went wrong.
  • Congratulate yourself - for the things you did
    right,
  • learn from the bits - Important.
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