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NUR 6210 Exam 2 Study Guide UPDATED for 2025/2026| Diabetes

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This comprehensive study guide covers all the key topics needed to succeed in NUR 6210 Exam 2, with a strong focus on Diabetes. Designed to make revision easier and more effective. Perfect for nursing students preparing for Exam 2, this guide is concise, organized, and aligned with the latest 2025/2026 exam updates.

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NUR 6210 EXAM 2 STUDY GUIDE
2025/2026 UPDATED



Diabetes




William Paterson University
NUR6210

,NUR
NUR 6210 Exam
Diabetes
Classification: 1. Type 1 diabetes (due to b-cell destruction, usually leading to absolute insulin deficiency); 2. Type II diabetes (due to a
progressive loss of insulin secretion on the background of insulin resistance); 3. Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) – diabetes diagnosed in
the 2nd or 3rd trimester of pregnancy that is not clearly overt diabetes; 4. specific types of diabetes due to other causes: ex: monogenic
diabetes syndromes (such as neonatal diabetes and maturity-onset diabetes of young (MODY), diseases of exocrine pancreas (such as cystic
fibrosis), and drug or chemical induced diabetes (such as with glucocorticoid use, in treatment of HIV/AIDS, and after organ transplantation)

Type II – previously referred to as “non-insulin independent diabetes” or “adult-onset diabetes”; accounts for 90-95% of all diabetes; this
form encompasses individuals who have insulin resistance and usually relative (rather than absolute) insulin deficiency

DM Screening in Asymptomatic Adult: overweight or obese (BMI > 25 or >23 in Asian Americans) and who have one or more additional risk
factors for diabetes: 1. Physical inactivity, 2. First-degree relative with diabetes, 3. High-risk race/ethnicity (African Americans, Latino,
Native American, Asian American, Pacific Islander); 4. Women who delivered a baby weighing 9lb or were diagnosed with gestational
diabetes; 5. HTN (>140/90mmHg or on therapy for HTN); 6. HDL cholesterol level 35 mg/dL and/or triglyceride level 250mg/dL (2.82
mmol/L); 7. Women with polycystic ovary syndrome; 8. A1C 5.7%, IGT, or IFG on previous testing; 9. Other clinical conditions associated
with insulin resistance (severe obesity, acanthosis nigricans), 10. History of cardiovascular
-criteria for screening: for all patients, testing should begin at age 45 years; if results are normal, testing should be repeated at a minimum of
3-year intervals, with consideration of more frequent testing depending on initial results (ex: those with prediabetes should be tested yearly)
and risk status; American Association of… recommends screening for diabetes in persons with risk factors only***

Classic Presentation: majority of patients are asymptomatic and hyperglycemia is found on routine lab evaluation; polydipsia, polyuria,
nocturia, blurred vision, and infrequently weight loss, fatigue, slowly and healing wounds, frequent infections and sometimes numbness and
tingling of hands and feet, vaginal infections, sexual problems; polyuria commonly presents when serum glucose concentrations rise
significantly above 180mg/dL which is the renal threshold for glucose; patients with type II diabetes may have no symptoms or only subtle
symptoms that may persist for weeks, months or years before detection

Criteria for Diagnosis: 1. Patient presents with classic symptoms of hyperglycemia (thirst, polyuria, weight loss, blurry vision) and random
plasma glucose ≥ 200mg/dL; 2. Asymptomatic patients with fasting
plasma glucose (FPG) ≥ 126mg/dL, two hour post oral glucose challenge (pregnant) ≥ 200mg/dL, or HbA1C ≥ 6.5;
*for asymptomatic: confirm test using a repeat test on subsequent day or if 2 different tests (FPG and A1C) are concordant for diagnosis of
diabetes; if 2 tests are discordant, the test result that is above the diagnostic cut point should be repeated, the diagnosis is made on the
basis of confirmed test*

Diagnostics – 1. Serum glucose (random or fasting): 100mg/dL normal, 100-125mg/dl prediabetes, ≥
126mg/dl diabetes; 2. HbA1C: <5.7% normal, 5.7-6.4% prediabetes, ≥ 6.5% diabetes; 3. Oral glucose
tolerance test: <140mg/dl normal, 140-199mg/dl prediabetes, ≥ 200mg/dl diabetes; 4. Urinalysis:
proteinuria, glucosuria; 4. C-peptide: 0.51-2.72ng/dl normal, <0.51ng/dl T1 DM, >2.72ng/dl T2 DM; 5. If not performed/available within
past year: fasting lipid profile, liver function tests, spot urinary albumin-to-creatinine ration, serum creatinine and estimated GFR, TSH in
patients with dyslipidemia or women aged >50

Comprehensive Medical Evaluation – 1. age and characteristics of onset of diabetes; 2. eating pattern/nutritional status/weight
history/physical activity habits – nutrition education and behavioral support history and needs; 3. presence of common comorbidities,
psychosocial problems and dental disease; 4. Screen for depression using PHQ-2 (PHQ-9 if PHQ-2 is positive); 5. Screen for diabetes distress
using DDS or PAID-1; 6. History of smoking, alcohol consumption and substance use; 7. Diabetes education, self-management, support
history and needs; 8. Review of previous treatment regimens and response to therapy (A1C records); 9. Results of glucose monitoring and
patient’s use of data; 10. Diabetes ketoacidosis frequency, severity and cause; 11. Hypoglycemia episodes, awareness and frequency and
causes; 12. History of increased blood pressure, increased lipids and tobacco use; 13. Microvascular complications: retinopathy,
nephropathy, and neuropathy (sensory, including history of foot lesions, autonomic including sexual dysfunction and gastroparesis); 14.
Macrovascular complications: coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease and peripheral arterial disease

Physical Examination: 1. height, weight and BMI (Growth and pubertal development in children and adolescents); 2. blood pressure
(orthostatic if indicated); 3. eyes (fundoscopy); 4. oral cavity (gum disease, fungal infection, or lesions); 5. neck (palpate thyroid); 6. cardiac:
HR, rate, rhythm, murmurs, clicks or extra heart sounds; 7. skin: irritation, infection, redness, ulcers, dryness, acanthosis nigrans; 8. feet:
pulses, reflexes, sensation, overall skin condition

Glycemic targets: 1. HgbA1C <7.0% for most non-pregnant adults; 2. Preprandial capillary plasma glucose 80-130 mg/dl; 3. Peak
postprandial capillary plasma glucose (1-2 hours after meals), 180mg/dl; 4. More stringent A1C goals (such as 6.5%) for selected individual
patients if this can be achieved without significant hypoglycemia and other adverse effects of treatment – short duration of diabetes, type II
diabetes treated with lifestyle or metformin only, long life expectancy, or no significant cardiovascular disease; 5. Less stringent A1C goals
(such as 8%) may be appropriate for patients with a history of severe hypoglycemia, limited life expectancy, advanced microvascular or
macrovascular complications, extensive comorbid conditions, or long-standing diabetes in whom the general goal is difficult to attain despite
diabetes self-management education, appropriate glucose monitoring and effective doses of multiple glucose-lowering agents including
insulin

Pharmacologic Management: Initial therapy: Metformin 500mg PO BID – increase in increments of 500mg weekly for max dose of 2000mg

, NUR
daily in 2 divided doses if goal not achieved; decreases hepatic glucose, increases insulin secretion and sensitivity; metformin may reduce
A1c by 1 to 2%, rarely causes hypoglycemia when used as monotherapy and does not cause weight gain, may cause weight loss; low-cost,
with a long track record of accumulated patient experience and safety, and it has a beneficial lipid effect; side effects/intolerance – GI
intolerance – slow titration and use of extended release, take with food; FDA revised safety GFR> 30; monitor B12
-ADA recommends if the A1C target is not achieved after approximately 3 months, consider a combination of metformin and one of these 6
treatment options: sulfonylurea, thiazolidinedione, DPP-4 inhibitors, SGLT2 inhibitors, GLP-1 receptor agonists, basal insulin; Drug choice is
based on patient
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