1 / 35

When you steal from one author, it's plagiarism; if you steal from many, it's research

When you steal from one author, it's plagiarism; if you steal from many, it's research . Wilson Mizner. Normal Pancreatic Function. Exocrine pancreas aids digestion Bicarbonate Lipase Amylase Proteases Endocrine pancreas (islets of Langerhans) Beta cells secrete insulin

garry
Télécharger la présentation

When you steal from one author, it's plagiarism; if you steal from many, it's research

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. When you steal from one author, it's plagiarism; if you steal from many, it's research Wilson Mizner

  2. Normal Pancreatic Function • Exocrine pancreas aids digestion • Bicarbonate • Lipase • Amylase • Proteases • Endocrine pancreas (islets of Langerhans) • Beta cells secrete insulin • Alpha cells secrete glucagon • Other hormones

  3. Insulin Insulin Insulin Insulin Stimulates Cellular Glucose Uptake Adipocytes Skeletal Muscle Liver Intestine & Pancreas

  4. Type 1 Diabetes:Hallmarks • Progressive destruction of beta cells • Decreased or no endogenous insulin secretion • Dependence on exogenous insulin for life

  5. Absence of Insulin • Glucose cannot be utilized by cells • Glucose concentration in the blood rises • Blood glucose concentrations can exceed renal threshold • Glucose is excreted in urine

  6. Presenting Symptoms of Type 1 Diabetes • Polyuria: Glucose excretion in urine increases urine volume • Polydipsia: Excessive urination leads to increased thirst • Hyperphagia: “Cellular starvation” increases appetite

  7. Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus:Background • Affects ~1 million people • Juvenile onset • Genetic component • Autoimmune/environmental etiology

  8. Insulin Glycerol Lipolysis Free fatty acids Triglyceride Synthesis Free fatty acids Glucose LPL Insulin Normal

  9. Triglyceride LPL Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus Glycerol Lipolysis Free fatty acids Synthesis Free fatty acids Glucose

  10. Normal Fasting blood glucose < 100 mg/dL Serum free fatty acids ~ 0.30 mM Serum triglyceride ~100 mg/dL Uncontrolled Type 1 Fasting blood glucose up to 500 mg/dL Serum free fatty acids up to 2 mM Serum triglyceride > 1000 mg/dL Clinical Chemistry

  11. Insulin Regulation of Hepatic Fatty Acid Partitioning FA-CoA TG ATP, CO2 -hydroxybutyrate acetoacetate Mitochondrion

  12. In Liver:FFA Entry into Mitochondria is Regulated by Insulin/Glucacon Malonyl CoA carnitine carnitine FA-CoA CPT-II FA-CoA CPT-I ATP, CO2 HB, AcAc inner outer TG Mitochondrial membranes CPT= Carnitine Palmitoyl Transferase

  13. Malonyl CoA is a Regulatory Molecule • Condensation of CO2 with acetyl CoA forms malonyl CoA • First step in fatty acid synthesis • Catalyzed by acetyl CoA carboxylase • Enzyme activity increased by insulin

  14. Ketone Bodies • Hydroxybutyrate, acetoacetate • Fuel for brain • Excreted in urine • At 12-14 mM reduce pH of blood • Can cause coma (diabetic ketoacidosis)

  15. Natural History Of “Pre”–Type 1 Diabetes Putative trigger -Cell mass 100% Cellular autoimmunity Circulating autoantibodies (ICA, GAD65) Loss of first-phase insulin response (IVGTT) Clinical onset— only 10% of-cells remain Glucose intolerance (OGTT) Genetic predisposition Insulitis-Cell injury “Pre”-diabetes Diabetes Time Eisenbarth GS. N Engl J Med. 1986;314:1360-1368 14

  16. Case 1R.T., a 15-year-old male with type 1 diabetes presented with a 5-day history of nausea and vomiting. He also reported a 2-week history of polyuria and polydipsia and a 10-lb weight loss. The patient was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes 2 years ago when he presented to a different hospital with symptoms of polyuria, polydipsia, and weight loss. The laboratory data showed an anion gap, metabolic acidosis, and hyperglycemia (pH of 7.14, anion gap of 24, bicarbonate 6 mmol/l, urinary ketones 150 mg/dl, glucose 314 mg/dl) consistent with the diagnosis of DKA. The patient's hemoglobin A1c (A1C) was 13.5%.

  17. The Miracle of Insulin February 15, 1923 Patient J.L., December 15, 1922

  18. Primary Defect in Type 2 • Study healthy 1st degree relatives of patients with type 2 • Measure ability of body to use glucose • Find defects in muscle glucose uptake before any symptoms develop

  19. Why is Glucose Transport Reduced? • Mitochondrial phosphorylation decreased 30% • Intramyocellular lipid is increased 80% • Ectopic fat may hinder insulin-stimulation of glucose transport.

  20. What is consequence of muscle insulin resistance? • Pancreas compensates > hyperinsulinemia • Hyperinsulinemia exacerbates insulin resistance in adipose tissue.

  21. Consequences of Insulin Resistance in Adipose Tissue • Similar to insulin deficiency • Reduced TG synthesis • Enhanced lipolysis • Net increase in FA availability to non-adipose tissues

  22. Consequences of Insulin Resistance FFA in Muscle • Increased intramyocellular lipid • Hypothetical: inhibition of insulin signaling by diglyceride • Reduction in glucose uptake by muscle

  23. Consequences of Insulin ResistanceFFA in Liver • Increased triglyceride synthesis • Increased oxidation • Increased gluconeogenesis • Hepatic glucose output contributes to hyperglycemia

  24. Consequences of Insulin ResistanceFFA in Pancreas • Animal models of diabetes • Lipid droplets accumulate in beta cells • Beta cells undergo apoptosis • Reduced beta cell mass • Decreased circulating insulin

  25. KEY POINTS ■ Resistance to the actions of insulin is strongly associated with the microvascular complications of diabetes, independently of metabolic control and hypertension ■ Insulin resistance is an important marker of risk and a key target for intervention, as those patients who achieve a greater improvement of insulin sensitivity achieve better microvascular outcomes ■ Diabetes and obesity are associated with pathway-selective insulin resistance in the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase signaling pathway, while signaling via extracellular signal-regulated kinase dependent pathways is comparatively unaffected, tipping the balance of insulin’s actions in favor of abnormal vasoreactivity, angiogenesis, and other pathways implicated in microangiopathy ■ Insulin resistance is able to enhance key pathways involved in hyperglycemia-induced microvascular damage and to exacerbate hypertension ■ The strong association between insulin resistance and microvascular disease might also reflect a common genotype or phenotype

More Related