1 / 56

Endocrine 3A

Endocrine 3A. Part 3. Long Term Complications of Diabetes. Macro vascular complications Arteriosclerosis Characterized by thickening and loss of elasticity of the arterial walls “ hardening of the arteries ” . Coronary Artery Disease Cerebrovascular Disease Peripheral vascular disease.

erwin
Télécharger la présentation

Endocrine 3A

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. Endocrine 3A Part 3

  2. Long Term Complications of Diabetes • Macro vascular complications • Arteriosclerosis • Characterized by thickening and loss of elasticity of the arterial walls “hardening of the arteries”. • Coronary Artery Disease • Cerebrovascular Disease • Peripheral vascular disease

  3. Coronary/cerebrovascular disease Changeable risk factors • Weight control • Low-fat diet • Treat hypertension • Treat hyperlipidema • Regular exercise • Control blood glucose levels • Smoking • Diabetes Unchangeable risk factors • Age • Gender • Family history • Race

  4. Microvascular complications • Characterized by basement membrane thickening • Effects smallest blood vessels • Due to hyperglycemia

  5. Diabetic Retinopathy • Damage to the tiny blood vessels that supply the eye  • Small hemorrhages occur • Damage is due to hyperglycemia

  6. Prevention • Control • Glucose • BP

  7. Prevention • No straining • Use laxatives • Avoid lowering head • Avoid lifting above shoulders

  8. Retinopathy: Medical Management • Photocoagulation “laser” treatment • Control hypertension • Control blood glucose • No smoking

  9. Retinopathy: Nursing Considerations • Expected • Odds are good • Frequent eye exams • Bilateral but uneven

  10. Other Optic Complications • Cataracts • Lens Changes • Extraocular muscle palsy • Glaucoma

  11. Nephropathy • Damage to the tiny blood vessels within the kidney. • Due to • Hyperglycemia

  12. Nephropathy: Etiology • h glucose levels • Stress kidney’s filtration mechanism • Blood protein leaks into urine • Pressure in blood vessel of kidney h • Kidney failure

  13. Nephropathy: Pathophysiology Normally • Kidneys filter blood • Small molecules & waste squeeze through kidneys  urine • Big stuff (I.e. protein, RBC), stay in blood where they belong

  14. Nephropathy: Pathophysiology • Diabetes damages the system • Filters start to leak • Protein and RBC lost in urine • Microalbuminuria • Macroalbuminuria • Proteinuria

  15. Nephropathy: Pathophysiology • Filters collapse • Lose of filtering ability • Kidney failure • ESRF / ENRD • Waste products build up in blood • Dialysis • Kidney transplant

  16. Nephropathy: S&S / Dx • Proteinuria / albuminuria • i urine output • Edema • BUN & Creatinine ↑ • h BP

  17. Nephropathy:Prevention • Control BG • Control HTN • Tx UTI • No nephrotoxic substances • i Na • i Protein

  18. Nephropathy:Management • Tight glucose control • Anti-hypertensives • Calcium-channel blockers • Alpha blockers • ACE inhibitor • Dialysis • Transplant

  19. Neuropathy • Damage to the Nerves due to hyperglycemia • Most common complication • Various Types of Neuropathies…

  20. Neuropathy • Sensory-Motor Polyneuropathy • AKA peripheral neuropathy • Paresthesias: primarily lower extremities • i deep tendon reflexes

  21. Neuropathy • Sensory-motor • Numb feet • i proprioception • i sensation • Unsteady gait • h risk foot injury

  22. Neuropathy: Management • Control serum glucose levels • Pain control • Analgesics (non-narcotic) • Tri-cyclic antidepressants • Anticonvulsants

  23. Neuropathy: • Autonomic neuropathy • Autonomic NS • Can affect almost any system

  24. Autonomic Neuropathy • Cardiovascular • Tachycardia • Orthostatic hypotension • MI

  25. Autonomic Neuropathy • Gastro-intestinal • Delayed gastric emptying • Constipation • Diarrhea

  26. Autonomic Neuropathy • Urinary • Retention • Neurogenic bladder

  27. Autonomic Neuropathy • Reproductive • Male impotence

  28. Autonomic Neuropathy • Adrenal Gland • “Hypoglycemic Unawareness” • Adrenal Medulla • Adrenergic symptoms • No longer feel S&S • Strict BG control & frequent monitoring

  29. Autonomic Neuropathy • Sudomotor neuropathy • No sweating • Anhidrosis •  dry feet •  foot ulcers

  30. Infections • High risk of foot infections • Neuropathy • Pain sensation • i • Pressure sensation • i • Dryness • h • Fissures • h

  31. Infections • Peripheral vascular disease • Circulation • i • WBC • i • Oxygen • i • wound healing • Poor • Antibiotics • i • Gangrene

  32. Infections • Immuno-compromised • WBC + hyperglycemia = sluggish WBC’s

  33. Infections • Once they occur  difficult to treat • Poor circulation • Antibiotic not get there • Sluggish WBC’s • Unknown wounds

  34. Infections • Particular concern • Foot infections/wounds

  35. Boils: • AKA: "furuncles" • round, pus-filled bumps on the skin • D/T: Staphylococcus aureus bacteria

  36. Cellulites • noncontagious inflammation of the connective tissue of the skin, • D/T bacterial infection • Treatment • Antibiotics • Analgesics

  37. Infections of concern • UTI’s • Yeast Infections • Periodontal disease

  38. Infections of concern Gangrene • term to describe the decay or death of an organ or tissue • d/t i blood supply.

  39. Infections of concern (FYI) • Necrotizing fasciitis • Flesh eating disease

  40. High risk for foot infections • Duration of diabetes • h Age • Smoking • i Peripheral pulses • i Sensation • Deformities/pressure areas • Hx of foot ulcers

  41. Progression of events • Soft tissue injury  • Injury not sensed  • Infection  • Drainage, swelling, redness  • Gangrene 

  42. Management of infections • Bed rest • Antibiotics • Topic vs. IV • Debridement • Control Glucose levels • ? Amputation

  43. Nursing Management • Teach foot care • prevention • Teach wound care

  44. Guideline to Healthy Feet • Wash daily • Dry between toes • Lubricate dry feet • Inspect • Mirror • Family • Between toes

  45. Guideline to Healthy Feet • Avoid activities that i circulation • Smoking • Crossing legs • Tight socks

  46. Guideline to Healthy Feet • Good shoes • Comfortable • Closed toe • No bare feet • New shoes • Break in slowly

  47. Guideline to Healthy Feet • Prevent injuries • Wear socks • Cotton • Light color • No wrinkles • Check inside of shoe

  48. Guideline to Healthy Feet • No temperature extremes • Check bath water • No water bottles • No heating pads

  49. Guideline to Healthy Feet • See doctor regularly • Podiatrist • Trim straight across • Do not cut calluses or corns

  50. Guideline to Healthy Feet • Range of Motion

More Related