985 resultados para diabetes nurse
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BACKGROUND: Over the years, somatic care has become increasingly specialized. Furthermore, a rising number of patients requiring somatic care also present with a psychiatric comorbidity. As a consequence, the time and resources needed to care for these patients can interfere with the course of somatic treatment and influence the patient-caregiver relationship. In the light of these observations, the Liaison Psychiatry Unit at the University Hospital in Lausanne (CHUV) has educated its nursing staff in order to strengthen its action within the general care hospital. What has been developed is a reflexive approach through supervision of somatic staff, in order to improve the efficiency of liaison psychiatry interventions with the caregivers in charge of patients. The kind of supervision we have developed is the result of a real partnership with somatic staff. Besides, in order to better understand the complexity of interactions between the two systems involved, the patient's and the caregivers', we use several theoretical references in an integrative manner. PSYCHOANALYTICAL REFERENCE: The psychoanalytical model allows us to better understand the dynamics between the supervisor and the supervised group in order to contain and give meaning to the affects arising in the supervision space. "Containing function" and "transitional phenomena" refer to the experience in which emotions can find a space where they can be taken in and processed in a secure and supportive manner. These concepts, along with that of the "psychic envelope", were initially developed to explain the psychological development of the baby in its early interactions with its mother or its surrogate. In the field of supervision, they allow us to be aware of these complex phenomena and the diverse qualities to which a supervisor needs to resort, such as attention, support and incentive, in order to offer a secure environment. SYSTEMIC REFERENCE: A new perspective of the patient's complexity is revealed by the group's dynamics. The supervisor's attention is mainly focused on the work of affects. However, these are often buried under a defensive shell, serving as a temporary protection, which prevents the caregiver from recognizing his or her own emotions, thereby enhancing the difficulties in the relationship with the patient. Whenever the work of putting emotions into words fail, we use "sculpting", a technique derived from the systemic model. Through the use of this type of analogical language, affects can emerge without constraint or feelings of danger. Through "playing" in that "transitional space", new exchanges appear between group members and allow new behaviors to be conceived. In practice, we ask the supervisee who is presenting a complex situation, to design a spatial representation of his or her understanding of the situation, through the display of characters significant to the situation: the patient, somatic staff members, relatives of the patient, etc. In silence, the supervisee shapes the characters into postures and arranges them in the room. Each sculpted character is identified, named, and positioned, with his or her gaze being set in a specific direction. Finally the sculptor shapes him or herself in his or her own role. When the sculpture is complete and after a few moments of fixation, we ask participants to express themselves about their experience. By means of this physical representation, participants to the sculpture discover perceptions and feelings that were unknown up to then. Hence from this analogical representation a reflection and hypotheses of understanding can arise and be developed within the group. CONCLUSION: Through the use of the concepts of "containing function" and "transitional space" we position ourselves in the scope of the encounter and the dialog. Through the use of the systemic technique of "sculpting" we promote the process of understanding, rather than that of explaining, which would place us in the position of experts. The experience of these encounters has shown us that what we need to focus on is indeed what happens in this transitional space in terms of dynamics and process. The encounter and the sharing of competencies both allow a new understanding of the situation at hand, which has, of course, to be verified in the reality of the patient-caregiver relationship. It is often a source of adjustment for interpersonal skills to recover its containing function in order to enable caregiver to better respond to the patient's needs.
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Background The global mortality caused by cardiovascular disease increases with weight. The Framingham study showed that obesity is a cardiovascular risk factor independent of other risks such as type 2 diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia and smoking. Moreover, the main problem in the management of weight-loss is its maintenance, if it is achieved. We have designed a study to determine whether a group motivational intervention, together with current clinical practice, is more efficient than the latter alone in the treatment of overweight and obesity, for initial weight loss and essentially to achieve maintenance of the weight achieved; and, secondly, to know if this intervention is more effective for reducing cardiovascular risk factors associated with overweight and obesity. Methods This 26-month follow up multi-centre trial, will include 1200 overweight/obese patients. Random assignment of the intervention by Basic Health Areas (BHA): two geographically separate groups have been created, one of which receives group motivational intervention (group intervention), delivered by a nurse trained by an expert phsychologist, in 32 group sessions, 1 to 12 fortnightly, and 13 to 32, monthly, on top of their standard program of diet, exercise, and the other (control group), receiving the usual follow up, with regular visits every 3 months. Discussion By addressing currently unanswered questions regarding the maintenance in weight loss in obesity/overweight, upon the expected completion of participant follow-up in 2012, the IMOAP trial should document, for the first time, the benefits of a motivational intervention as a treatment tool of weight loss in a primary care setting.
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UKPDS and DCCT studies have demonstrated the critical role of tight glycaemic control to reduce the micro- and macro-vascular damage linked to diabetes. Unfortunately, the insulin requirement of type 2 diabetic patients remains elevated since 5 to 7% of these patients will required, yearly, a change from oral antidiabetic drug to insulin treatment to maintain a good glycaemic control. This manuscript is intended to review the currently available oral antidiabetic drugs, their benefits as well as potential arms and to propose a simplified therapeutic strategy in presence of type 2 diabetes.
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There are not enough previous publications which are focused on mothers withwell-controlled gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) as a risk factor that determines the occurrence of neonatal hypoglycemia. In addition, approaches to blood glucose monitoring have been inconsistent and poorly defined. Our objective is to determine if being a newborn from a mother with well-controlled gestational diabetes (regardless insulin treatment) have a higher risk to develop hypoglycemia than a healthy newborn, using a defined and strict protocol. The project will take place in a regional hospital of Girona. We will recruit from 2014 to 2015 a cohort of 623 infants born in this center without any malformation or any perinatal pathology or complication, selected with a consecutive sampling. We will record sex, ethnicity and gestational age information. We will measure blood glucose levels and anthropometric measurements in newborns always taking into account the presence of well-controlled maternal gestational diabetes or not. Patients will be followed up during 24 hours to determine the incidence of hypoglycemia. We will analyze the contribution between exposure factors that we have studied and the incidence of the outcome using a multivariate analysis
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Background: Pre-existing psychological factors can strongly influence coping with type 1 diabetes mellitus and interfere with self-monitoring. Psychiatric disorders seem to be positively associated with poor metabolic control. We present a case of extreme compulsive blood testing due to obsessive fear of hypoglycemia in an adolescent with type 1 diabetes mellitus. Case report: Type 1 diabetes mellitus (anti GAD-antibodies 2624 U/l, norm < 9.5) was diagnosed in a boy aged 14.3 years [170 cm (+ 0.93 SDS), weight 50.5 kg (+ 0.05 SDS)]. Laboratory work-up showed no evidence for other autoimmune disease. Family and past medical history were unremarkable. Growth and developmental milestones were normal. Insulin-analog based basal-bolus regime was initiated, associated to standard diabetic education. Routine psychological evaluation performed at the onset of diabetes revealed intermittent anxiety and obsessivecompulsive traits. Accordingly, a close psychiatric follow-up was initiated for the patient and his family. An adequate metabolic control (HbA1c drop from >14 to 8%) was achieved within 3 months, attributed to residual -cell function. In the following 6 months, HbA1c rose unexpectedly despite seemingly adequate adaptations of insulin doses. Obsessive fear of hypoglycemia leading to a severe compulsive behavior developed progressively with as many as 68 glycemia measurements per day (mean over 1 week). The patient reported that he could not bear leaving home with glycemia < 15 mmol/l, ending up with school eviction and severe intra-familial conflict. Despite intensive psychiatric outpatient support, HbA1c rose rapidly to >14% with glycemia-testing reaching peaks of 120 tests/day. The situation could only be discontinued through psychiatric hospitalization with intensive behavioral training. As a result, adequate metabolic balance was restored (HbA1c value: 7.1 %) with acceptable 10-15 daily glycemia measurements. Discussion: The association of overt psychiatric disorders to type 1 diabetes mellitus is very rare in the pediatric age group. It can lead to a pathological behavior with uncontrolled diabetes. Such exceptional situations require long-term admissions with specialized psychiatric care. Slow acceptation of a "less is better" principle in glycemia testing and amelioration of metabolic control are difficult to achieve.
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OBJECTIVES: Leptin may be involved in the regulation of body weight, food intake, and energy expenditure. In view of a possible link between leptin concentrations and diabetes that has been suggested in obese rodents, we investigated the potential relationship between serum leptin concentrations and hyperglycaemia in French patients with morbid obesity. SUBJECTS: Fasting leptin concentrations were measured in 241 morbidly obese patients with various degrees of glucose tolerance in a cross-sectional study. RESULTS: Fasting serum leptin concentrations did not differ between normoglycaemia (NG, 61.5 +/- 24.0 ng/ml) and glucose intolerant morbidly obese subjects (IGT, 56.5 +/- 18.5 ng/ml) and were slightly lower in those with controlled diabetes (55.1 +/- 30.3 ng/ml, P = 0.06 when compared to NG subjects). In contrast, leptin concentrations were 30% lower in patients with poorly controlled diabetes (43.0 +/- 22.2 ng/ml, P = 0.001 vs NG subjects). Leptin concentrations were negatively correlated with fasting glucose in all groups combined (p = -0.24, P = 0.0001) and particularly in NIDDM subjects (p = 0.31, P = 0.0054). Although leptin concentrations were higher in women than in men, similar significant correlation with fasting glucose was found when females were analyzed separately. A positive correlation was found with BMI (p = 0.25, P = 0.0001) in all groups. Multivariate analysis revealed that fasting glucose was independently associated with serum leptin concentrations (F = 12.5, P = 0.0005). Sex, age, BMI, waist/hip ratio, fasting glucose and insulin, total cholesterol and triglycerides, tested in the model, explained 42% of the leptin variability in this population. CONCLUSIONS: Poorly controlled diabetes was accompanied by a significant reduction of serum leptin concentrations in morbidly obese subjects. We suggest that a relative leptin deficiency (lower than expected for the BMI) associated with insulin deficiency in this population might contribute to a vicious cycle maintaining (or even worsening) obesity itself and/or its metabolic complications.
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Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) is an autoimmune disease, due to the immune-mediated destruction of pancreatic β-cells, whose incidence has been steadily increasing during the last decades. Insulin replacement therapy can treat T1DM, which, however, is still associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. For this reason, great effort is being put into developing strategies that could eventually prevent and/or cure this disease. These strategies are mainly focused on blocking the immune system from attacking β-cells together with functional islet restoration either by regeneration or transplantation. Recent experimental evidences suggest that TNFrelated apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), which is an immune system modulator protein, could represent an interesting candidate for the cure for T1DM and/or its complications. Here we review the evidences on the potential role of TRAIL in the management of T1DM.
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AIM: To assess whether blockade of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), a recognized strategy to prevent the progression of diabetic nephropathy, affects renal tissue oxygenation in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients. METHODS: Prospective randomized 2-way cross over study; T2DM patients with (micro)albuminuria and/or hypertension underwent blood oxygenation level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-MRI) at baseline, after one month of enalapril (20mgqd), and after one month of candesartan (16mgqd). Each BOLD-MRI was performed before and after the administration of furosemide. The mean R2* (=1/T2*) values in the medulla and cortex were calculated, a low R2* indicating high tissue oxygenation. RESULTS: Twelve patients (mean age: 60±11 years, eGFR: 62±22ml/min/1.73m(2)) completed the study. Neither chronic enalapril nor candesartan intake modified renal cortical or medullary R2* levels. Furosemide significantly decreased cortical and medullary R2* levels suggesting a transient increase in renal oxygenation. Medullary R2* levels correlated positively with urinary sodium excretion and systemic blood pressure, suggesting lower renal oxygenation at higher dietary sodium intake and blood pressure; cortical R2* levels correlated positively with glycemia and HbA1c. CONCLUSION: RAS blockade does not seem to increase renal tissue oxygenation in T2DM hypertensive patients. The response to furosemide and the association with 24h urinary sodium excretion emphasize the crucial role of renal sodium handling as one of the main determinants of renal tissue oxygenation.
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Diabetes mellitus is characterized by insulin secretion from pancreatic β cells that is insufficient to maintain blood glucose homeostasis. Autoimmune destruction of β cells results in type 1 diabetes mellitus, whereas conditions that reduce insulin sensitivity and negatively affect β-cell activities result in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Without proper management, patients with diabetes mellitus develop serious complications that reduce their quality of life and life expectancy. Biomarkers for early detection of the disease and identification of individuals at risk of developing complications would greatly improve the care of these patients. Small non-coding RNAs called microRNAs (miRNAs) control gene expression and participate in many physiopathological processes. Hundreds of miRNAs are actively or passively released in the circulation and can be used to evaluate health status and disease progression. Both type 1 diabetes mellitus and type 2 diabetes mellitus are associated with distinct modifications in the profile of miRNAs in the blood, which are sometimes detectable several years before the disease manifests. Moreover, circulating levels of certain miRNAs seem to be predictive of long-term complications. Technical and scientific obstacles still exist that need to be overcome, but circulating miRNAs might soon become part of the diagnostic arsenal to identify individuals at risk of developing diabetes mellitus and its devastating complications.
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L'insuline, produite par les cellules β du pancréas, joue un rôle central dans le contrôle de la glycémie. Un manque d'insuline entraine le diabète de type 2, une maladie répandue au stade d'épidémie au niveau mondial. L'augmentation du nombre de personnes obèses est une des causes principales du développement de la maladie. Avec l'obésité les tissus tels que le foie, le muscle, et le tissu adipeux deviennent résistants à l'insuline. En général, cette résistance est équilibrée par une augmentation de la sécrétion d'insuline. De ce fait, un grand nombre d'individus obèses ne deviennent pas diabétiques. Lorsque les cellules β ne produisent plus suffisamment d'insuline, alors le diabète se développe. Dans l'obésité, les cellules graisseuses sont résistantes à l'insuline et relâchent des lipides et autres produits qui affectent le bon fonctionnement et la vie des cellules β. «c-Jun Ν terminal Kinase» (JNK) est une enzyme qui joue un rôle important dans la résistance de l'insuline des cellules graisseuses. Cette même en2yme contribue aussi au déclin de la cellule β dans les conditions diabétogènes, et représente ainsi une cible thérapeutique potentielle du diabète. L'objectif de cette thèse a été de comprendre le mécanisme conduisant à l'activité de JNK dans les adipocytes et cellules β, dans l'obésité et le diabète de type 2. Nous montrons que les variations de JNK sont la conséquence de taux anormaux de JIP-1/EB1, une protéine qui a été impliquée dans certaines formes génétiques de diabète de type 2. En outre nous décrivons le mécanisme responsable des anomalies de JIP1/IB1 dans les adipocytes et cellules β. La restauration des taux de JIP-1/EB1 dans les deux types cellulaires pourrait être un objectif des thérapeutiques antidiabétiques actuelles et futures. - Le nombre d'individus touchés par le diabète de type 2 atteint aujourd'hui des proportions épidémiques à l'échelle mondiale. L'augmentation de la prévalence de l'obésité est la cause principale du développement de la maladie, qui, en général, survient suite à une perte de la sensibilité à l'insuline des tissus périphériques. Dans un grand nombre des cas, l'insulino-résistance est compensée par une augmentation de la sécrétion de l'insuline par les cellules β pancréatiques. Le diabète apparaît lorsque l'insuline n'est plus produite en quantité suffisante pour contrecarrer la résistance à l'insuline des tissus. Le défaut de production de l'insuline résulte du dysfonctionnement et de la réduction massive des cellules β. Les acides gras libres non estérifiés, en particulier le palmitate, provenant d'une alimentation riche en lipides et libérés par les adipocytes insulino-résistants contribuent au déclin de la cellule β en activant la voie de signalisation «cJun N-terminal kinase» (JNK). L'activation de JNK contribue aussi à la résistance à l'insuline des adipocytes dans l'obésité, soulignant ainsi l'importance de cette voie de signalisation dans la pathophysiologie du diabète. L'objectif de cette thèse a été de comprendre les mécanismes qui régulent JNK dans les cellules β et les adipocytes. Nous montrons que l'activation de JNK dans ces deux types cellulaires est la conséquence de la variation des taux de «JNK interacting protein 1» appelé aussi «islet brain 1» (JEP-1/ΓΒΙ), une protéine qui attache les kinases de la signalisation de JNK et dont des variations génétiques ont été associées avec le diabète de type 2. Dans les cellules β cultivées avec du palmitate, ainsi que dans les adipocytes dans l'obésité, l'expression de JEP-l/BBl est modifiée. Les modulations de l'expression de JEP-1/ΓΒΙ sont réalisées par le facteur de transcription «inducible cAMP early repressor» (ICER). L'expression d'ICER dans les adipocytes est diminuée dans l'obésité, et corrèle avec l'augmentation des niveaux de JEP-1/IB1. A l'inverse, le niveau d'expression d'ICER est augmenté dans les cellules β cultivées avec du palmitate, et cette augmentation perturbe le bon fonctionnement des cellules en réduisant les niveaux de JEP-l/IBl. Comme le palmitate, les particules pro-athérogéniques LDL-cholesterol oxydés, sont élevées chez les personnes obèses et diabétiques et sont délétères aux cellules β. Ces particules modifiées activent JNK dans les cellules β en diminuant l'expression de JIP-1/IB1 via ICER. Tous ces résultats montrent que le dérèglement de l'expression de JIP-l/EBl par ICER joue un rôle central dans l'activation de JNK dans les adipocytes et cellules β en souffrance dans l'obésité et le diabète de type 2. La restauration appropriée des niveaux de JEPl/IBl et d'ICER pourrait être considérée comme un objectif pour mesurer l'efficacité des traitements antidiabétiques actuels et futurs. - Type 2 diabetes has reached epidemic proportions worldwide, and poses a major socio-economic burden on developed and developing societies. The disease is often accompanied by obesity, and arises when β-cells produce insufficient insulin to meet the increased hormone demand, caused by insulin resistance. In obesity, enlargement of adipocytes contribute to their dysfunction, which is characterized by the abnormal release of some bioactive products such as non-esterified free fatty acids (NEF As). Chronic plasma elevation of NEF As elicits β-cell dysfunction and death, thereby, representing a key feature for development of diabetes in obesity (diabesity). Palmitate is the most abundant circulating NEF As in obesity, which triggers adipocytes and β-cell dysfunction. The effects of palmitate rely on the induction of the cJun N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathway. Activation of JNK promotes both β-cells dysfunction and insulin resistance in adipocytes. This thesis was undertaken to investigate the mechanisms accounting for the induction of the JNK pathway caused by palmitate. JNK is regulated by the scaffold protein JNK interacting protein-1, also called islet brain 1 (JIP-1/IB1). The levels of JDM/IB1 are critical for glucose homeostasis, as genetic variations within the gene were associated with diabetes. We found that activation of JNK in both, β-cells exposed to palmitate, and in adipocytes of obese mice, results from variations in the expression of JIP-l/EBl. Modifications in the JIP-1/IB1 levels were the consequence of abnormal expression of the inducible cAMP early repressor (ICER) in the two cell types. In addition, our data show that this repressor plays a key role in abnormal production of adipocyte hormones and β-cell dysfunction evoked by the pro-atherogenic oxidized LDL. Taken together, this study proposes that fine-tuning of appropriate levels of JIP-l/EBl, and ICER could circumvent β-cell failure, adipocyte dysfunction, and thereby, development of diabesity.
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The Iowa Diabetes Prevention and Control Program provides educational opportunities for health care providers via the Iowa Communications Network interactive fiber optic system. The program also certifies diabetes outpatient education programs in Iowa based on minimum criteria for quality programs. In Iowa during the past 20 years, the prevalence rate of diagnosed diabetes increased dramatically among adults: Between 1991 and 2009 the crude diabetes prevalence rate rose by 84%, from 3.8% to 7.0%. Between these years, the age‐adjusted adult diagnosed diabetes prevalence rate increased by 64%, rising from 3.7% to 6.4%. During the 18 years 1991‐93 through 2006‐08, the number of Iowa adults with diagnosed diabetes more than doubled, increasing from 78,000 to 162,000. While the Iowa Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), upon which the numbers cited above are based, provides reliable state‐level self‐reported data on adults with diagnosed diabetes, it is unable to provide estimates of undiagnosed diabetes. National estimates put the prevalence of undiagnosed adult diabetes at about 5%, raising the estimated adult diabetes prevalence rate in Iowa to 12% (280,000 adults) (Cowie,2009). Another 5% of all Iowa adults are estimated to have diagnosed pre‐diabetes, while 25% of all Iowa adults, based on national estimates from the 2005‐06 National Health and Nutrition and Examination Survey (NHANES), likely have undiagnosed pre‐diabetes. (Cowie, 2009)
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The Iowa Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), a household interview survey of adults that began to include a core question covering diagnosed diabetes prevalence in 1988, is the primary source of data in this Iowa Chronic Disease Report supplemental update on diabetes. Most rates in this supplement are age-adjusted, rather than crude rates. Age-adjusting eliminates differences in rates that are attributable to populations being compared having difference age distributions.
Resumo:
The Iowa Diabetes Prevention and Control Program provides educational opportunities for health care providers via the Iowa Communications Network interactive fiber optic system. The program also certifies diabetes outpatient education programs in Iowa.