DM Diagnosis - Numbers Game
- Key Diagnostic Tests:
- Fasting Plasma Glucose (FPG): No caloric intake for ≥ 8 hours.
- 2-hour Post-OGTT: Plasma glucose 2 hours after 75g oral glucose load.
- Glycated Hemoglobin (HbA1c): Reflects long-term glycemic control.
- Diagnostic Criteria (ADA/WHO):
| Test | Normal | Prediabetes | Diabetes Mellitus |
|---|---|---|---|
| FPG (mg/dL) | < 100 | 100 - 125 | ≥ 126 |
| 2-hr PG (mg/dL) | < 140 | 140 - 199 | ≥ 200 |
| HbA1c (%) | < 5.7 | 5.7 - 6.4 | ≥ 6.5 |
⭐ HbA1c reflects average blood glucose over the past 2-3 months; less affected by acute fluctuations.
Insulin Action - Key Player
- Synthesis:
- Preproinsulin (RER) → Proinsulin (Golgi) → Insulin + C-peptide (secretory granules).
- C-peptide: Marker of endogenous insulin production.
- Secretion (β-cells):
- Stimuli: Glucose (major), amino acids, incretins (GLP-1, GIP).
- Receptor & Signaling:
- Receptor: Tyrosine kinase (RTK); 2α (binding) & 2β (kinase) subunits.
- Signaling: Insulin binds → Autophosphorylation → IRS activation →
- PI3K/Akt pathway: GLUT4 translocation, glycogen synthesis, lipogenesis, protein synthesis.
- MAPK pathway: Mitogenic effects (cell growth).
- GLUT4:
⭐ GLUT4 is the insulin-dependent glucose transporter found in muscle (skeletal, cardiac) and adipose tissue.
- Insulin mediates its membrane translocation.
- Metabolic Effects (Anabolic):
- Carbs: ↑ Glucose uptake (GLUT4), ↑ Glycogenesis, ↓ Gluconeogenesis, ↓ Glycogenolysis.
- Fats: ↑ Lipogenesis, ↓ Lipolysis.
- Proteins: ↑ Protein synthesis.

Metabolic Mayhem - Sweet Chaos
- Hyperglycemia: ↓ Insulin action → ↓ glucose uptake, ↑ gluconeogenesis & glycogenolysis.
- Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA): Severe insulin deficiency (often T1DM).
- Pathogenesis: ↑ Lipolysis → ↑ FFAs → ↑ hepatic ketogenesis ($Acetoacetate, \beta-Hydroxybutyrate$).
- Features: Hyperglycemia (>250 mg/dL), metabolic acidosis (anion gap >12 mEq/L), ketonemia, ketonuria.
- 📌 DKA: Dehydration, Ketones & Kussmaul, Acidosis, Abdominal pain.
- Hyperosmolar Hyperglycemic State (HHS): Relative insulin deficiency (often T2DM).
- Features: Severe hyperglycemia (>600 mg/dL), hyperosmolality (>320 mOsm/kg), profound dehydration, minimal ketosis.
- Dyslipidemia: ↑ TGs, ↑ VLDL, ↓ HDL due to altered lipid metabolism.
- Biochemical Pathways: Disrupted glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, lipolysis, protein catabolism. Polyol pathway activation (sorbitol). Advanced Glycation End-products (AGEs) formation.

⭐ Kussmaul breathing in DKA is a compensatory hyperventilation to counteract metabolic acidosis by expelling carbon dioxide.
Chronic Damage - Sugar's Scars
Persistent hyperglycemia fuels chronic complications via key biochemical pathways:
- Advanced Glycation End products (AGEs): Non-enzymatic glycation alters protein/lipid structure & function.
- Polyol Pathway: Glucose → sorbitol (by aldose reductase); ↑sorbitol causes osmotic stress.
⭐ Sorbitol accumulation via aldose reductase contributes to osmotic damage in diabetic complications (e.g., cataracts, neuropathy).
- Protein Kinase C (PKC) Activation: Hyperglycemia → diacylglycerol (DAG) → PKC activation → vascular dysfunction.
- Oxidative Stress: ↑Reactive oxygen species (ROS) overwhelm antioxidant defenses.
These converge, causing:
- Microvascular damage: Retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy.
- Macrovascular damage: Atherosclerosis, CAD, PVD.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Insulin deficiency or resistance is the core defect in Diabetes Mellitus.
- Persistent hyperglycemia results from impaired glucose uptake and ↑ hepatic glucose production.
- Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA), in Type 1 DM, is caused by ↑ lipolysis and ketogenesis.
- HbA1c is a key indicator of long-term glycemic control (non-enzymatic glycation).
- Advanced Glycation End products (AGEs) mediate many chronic diabetic complications.
- The polyol pathway (sorbitol accumulation) contributes to neuropathy and cataracts.
- Glucagon excess contributes to hyperglycemia in diabetes.
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