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insulin and oral hypoglycemics
ENDO
40
Medical
Graduate
12/01/2010

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Term
how does the structure/function of the pancreas break down?
Definition
the pancreas has 2 kinds of tissue: acini (secrete digestive juices to the duo) and the islets of langerhans (secrete hormones directly into the blood).
Term
what cells are found in the islets of langerhans? what do they produce?
Definition
alpha cells produce glucagon, beta cells produce insulin, delta cells produce somatostatin, and PP cells secrete pancreatic polypeptide.
Term
what characterizes insulin as a molecule?
Definition
insulin is 2 amino acid chains connected by disulfide linkages, which if lost = loss of functional activity. when insulin binds, it has 2 alpha subunits outside the cell membrane and 2 beta subunits which penetrate the membrane and protrude into the cell cytoplasm. the beta subunits autophosphorylate and become activated enzymes which ultimately incur a decrease in blood glucose.
Term
what are the 3 responses the body has to insulin binding?
Definition
1) initial, rapid cell membrane change to a higher permeability for glucose, AAs, K+, and phosphate. 2) slower response (10-15 min) of intracellular actions changing activity levels of various enzymes. 3) very slow process (hours-days) of transcription/translation rate changes.
Term
what is glucagon?
Definition
a hormone which increases blood glucose, the "hyperglycemic hormone", via increasing glycogenolysis/gluconeogenesis in the liver
Term
what is somatostatin?
Definition
a stabilizing hormone which locally depresses release of both glucagon and insulin, decreases motility of the stomach/duodenum, and decreases secretion/absorption of food. somatostatin release is stimulated by increased blood glucose, AAs, FAs, and other GI hormones.
Term
what are the glucose disorders?
Definition
DM1: insulin dependent, DM2: insulin resistant, and hyperinsulinism
Term
what are the different types of exogenous insulin available?
Definition
human insulin (HUMULIN - from recombinant DNA), porcine (has 1 different AA at position 30), and bovine (has 2 different AA at 30 and 8/10)
Term
what are the advantages to using recombinant human insulin?
Definition
less antigenic, lower titers of insulin-binding Ab, and less allergenic (skin/immunologic resistance)
Term
what are the different types of insulin available according to duration of action?
Definition
1) short/rapid action: regular crystalline zinc insulin injection or semilente insulin zinc suspension. 2) intermediate-acting: neutral protamine hagedorn (NPH), lente zinc suspension (mix of semi+ultra lente), and human insulin. 3) long-lasting: ultra lente zinc suspension and protamine zinc insulin.
Term
what are the 2 popular mixtures of insulins with different durations of action?
Definition
1) 30% regular/70% NPH. 2) 50% regular/50% NPH. mixtures are becoming more common and are more accurate to the individual’s need.
Term
what is the disadvantage of long-lasting insulin?
Definition
harder to control
Term
what is the onset, duration, and peak for regular insulin injection?
Definition
onset: IV 5 min/SC 15 min. peak: 2-4 hrs. duration: 4-6 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, duration, and peak for semilente insulin?
Definition
onset: 30-60 min. peak: 4-6 hrs. duration: 12-16 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, duration, and peak for isophane/NPH insulin?
Definition
onset: 2-4 hrs. peak: 6-10 hrs. duration: 24-48 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, duration, and peak for lente insulin?
Definition
onset: 2-4 hrs. peak: 6-10 hrs. duration: 12-24 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, duration, and peak for protamine zinc insulin?
Definition
onset: 4-6 hrs. peak: 14-20 hrs. duration: 24-36 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, duration, and peak for ultralente insulin?
Definition
onset: 4-6 hrs. peak: 16-18 hrs. duration: 20-36 hrs.
Term
what is humalog?
Definition
a very rapid acting insulin - onset is about 5 minutes due to a slight AA chain reversal (pts should not take unless they are 5-10 min from eating). novolog is a similar drug.
Term
what are the routes of administration used for insulin?
Definition
subcutaneous injection (common), external infusion pump, and internal infusion pump. nasal/inhaled/oral are in various stages of development.
Term
what are the 2 kinds of oral hypoglycemics (used for DM2)?
Definition
sulfonylureas and biguanide derivatives
Term
what is the MOA for the sulfonylureas?
Definition
stimulation of insulin release from beta cells (requires some level of blood glucose to work) via binding receptors that *increase Ca2+ intracellular influx (insulin release is Ca2+ dependent). this ultimately enhances the effects of insulin by producing more insulin for a better chance of binding receptors (faulty or good receptors).
Term
what are the 1st gen sulfonylureas?
Definition
tolbutamide, tolazamide, acetohexamide, and chlorpropamide (disulfiram rxn)
Term
what are the 2nd gen sulfonylureas?
Definition
glipizide, glyburide
Term
what ADRs are associated w/the sulfonylureas?
Definition
hypoglycemia (if the drug is displaced from carrier proteins by other drugs), GI disturbances, allergic rxns, dermatological problems, transient leukopenia (usually upon initiation of therapy), and a disulfiram rxn w/chlorpropamide (also causes fluid retention).
Term
what is the MOA for the biguanides/metformin?
Definition
this DOC for DM2 makes insulin that is present more effective and reduces glucose levels via *reduction of glucose production in the liver, *stimulation of glycolysis in peripheral tissues, *decrease in glucose absorption in the intestines, and *increased insulin binding. since biguanides don't affect insulin itself, it *rarely causes hypoglycemia. biguanides can also *reduce LDLs and increase HDLs.
Term
when are biguanides/metformin contraindicated?
Definition
in renal and hepatic insufficiency
Term
what ADRs are associated w/biguanides/metformin?
Definition
metallic taste, lactic acidosis (rare), impaired vit B12 absorption (supplemental B12 in anemic pts), n/v, anorexia, abdominal discomfort, and diarrhea
Term
what drugs facilitate the action of insulin?
Definition
acarbose, linogliride, pioglitazone, and rosiglitazone
Term
what is the MOA for acarbose?
Definition
acarbose *prevents the hydrolysis of complex dietary carbohydrates (does not stimulate insulin release/increase its action/cause hypoglycemia). ADRs: GI
Term
what is the MOA for linogliride?
Definition
this is in a different molecular class but essentially functions like sulfonylureas and appears to act as an *insulin secretagogue.
Term
what is the MOA for pioglitazone?
Definition
this *decreases insulin resistance in periphery (not a secretagogue) as an agonist at the proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPAR gamma) which upregulates transcription of insulin responsive genes involved in glucose/lipid metabolism. rosiglitazone is basically the same thing, but has been taken off the market as it is associated w/an increased heart attack rate.
Term
what is the major hyperglycemic and when is it used?
Definition
glucagon, which stimulates gluconeogenesis, glycogenolysis and ketogenolysis. it is used to counter severe hypoglycemia (can raise plasma concentration of glucose w/in 15 min).
Term
what is the onset, half-life, and duration for tolbutamide?
Definition
onset: 1-4 hrs. half-life: 3-5 hrs. duration: 6-10 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, half-life, and duration for chlorpropamide?
Definition
onset: 1-3 hrs. half-life: 24-48 hrs. duration: 24-72 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, half-life, and duration for tolazamide?
Definition
onset: 4-6 hrs. half-life: 4-7 hrs. duration: 16-24 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, half-life, and duration for acetohexamide?
Definition
onset: 1-2 hrs. half-life: 3-11 hrs. duration: 12-18 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, half-life, and duration for glyburide?
Definition
onset: 2-4 hrs. half-life: 10-16 hrs. duration: 18-24 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, half-life, and duration for glipizide?
Definition
onset: 1-2 hrs. half-life: 1-5 hrs. duration: 16-24 hrs.
Term
what is the onset, half-life, and duration for metformin?
Definition
onset: 1-2 hrs. half-life: 2-6 hrs. duration: 18-24 hrs.
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