Rasmussen College - Professional Nursing 2/PN2 Exam 3 Study Guide.
N2 Exam 3 Type 1 Diabetes – an autoimmune dysfunction involving the destruction of beta cells, which produce insulin in the islets of Langerhans of the pancreas. Type 1 is an absolute lack of insulin secretion o Absence of insulin production; patient is dependent on insulin to prevent ketoacidosis and maintain life o Onset is frequently in childhood; usually ages 10-15 o This is forever o First sign is often Diabetic Ketoacidosis Type 2 is a combination of insulin resistance and inadequate insulin secretion to compensate o Often linked to obesity, sedentary lifestyle, and heredity o Onset is predominately in adulthood, generally after the age of 35 o Usually controlled with diet, exercise and oral hypoglycemics o Usually found by accident; the patient keeps coming back for a wound that won’t heal or repeated vaginal infections Signs and Symptoms: o Both Type 1 and Type 2: 3 Ps: polyuria, polydipsia, and polyphagia o Fatigue o Increased frequency of infections Type 1: o Weight loss o Bed-wetting, blurred vision o Enuresis (involuntary urination, especially in children at night) in children, nocturia in adults o Abdominal pain o Rapid onset Type 2: o Weight gain, visual disturbances o Slow onset; usually around 40 years old o Fatigue and malaise o Recurrent vaginal yeast Diagnostics: o The criteria for diagnosis must include two findings on separate days – must also be the test plus a random glucose greater than 200 mg/dL o Fasting blood glucose level above 126 mg/dL o Oral glucose tolerance test: 2- hour glucose values greater than 200 mg/dL o Glycosylated hemoglobin (A1C) greater than 6.5% Medications: Insulin: o Rapid-acting insulin: lispro, aspart, glulisine Given before meals Onset: 5-15 minutes Peak: 30-90 minutes Duration: les than 5 hours Given subcutaneously Given in conjunction with intermediate- or long-acting insulin to provide control between meals and at night Because of quick onset, patient must eat immediately o Short-Acting Insulin: regular Given approximately 30-60 minutes before meals Onset: 30 minutes – 1 hour Peak: 2-3 hours Duration: 5-8 hours This is our clear insulin Given alone or in combination with longer-acting insulin Given for sliding scale coverage Can be given subcutaneously, IV, or IM ***only insulin that can be given IV U-500 is for patient who is insulin resistant, never given IV U-100 is for most patients and can be given IV o Intermediate-Acting insulin: NPH, Novolin N Hypoglycemia tends to occur in mid to late afternoon Onset: 2-4 hours Peak: 4-10 hours Duration: 10-16 hours This is our cloudy insulin Given for control between meals and at night Contains protamine (a protein), which causes a delay in the insulin absorption or onset and extends the duration of action of the insulin Give NPH insulin subQ only – can be mixed with short-acting or rapid-acting o Long-Acting Insulin: glargine (Lantus), detemir (Levemir) CANNOT be diluted or mixed with any other insulin Usually given at bedtime Onset: 2-4 hours No peak Duration: 24 hours Detemir may be given twice a day, dependent on dose Only given subQ
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Rasmussen College
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PN 2
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rasmussen college pn 2pn2 exam 3
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rasmussen college professional nursing 2pn2 exam 3
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professional nursing 2pn2 exam 3