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Prevention of complications of endocrine disorders

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Title: Prevention of complications of endocrine disorders


1
Prevention of complications of endocrine disorders
  • R.Fielding
  • Department of Community Medicine, HKU.

2
Learning objectives
  • Estimate the extent of morbidity and use of
    resources from complications of endocrine
    disorders due to overweight and inactivity
  • outline the main barriers to prevention of
    endocrine complications
  • explain key contributions to these barriers
  • suggest cost-effective solutions

3
Common endocrine complications
  • type 2 (NIDDM) diabetes,
  • hypertension,
  • dyslipidaemia, and
  • cardiovascular diseases including AMI, AP, PVD
    stroke.
  • Why are these now considered complications of
    endocrine disorders?

4
  • Because they reflect disorders or more accurately
    complications arising from a syndrome of over
    nutrition and inactivity, which produces
    disturbances in the regulation of energy
    metabolism.
  • These diseases are, therefore, more accurately
    described as complications, but doctors seldom
    take this perspective, preferring to look at each
    disease as a separate thing endocrinologists
    care for NIDDM, cardiologists for AMI, etc.

5
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6
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7
Prevalence of DM in HK
  • 58 of men, 49 of women BMI gt23.5
  • 38 men 34 women BMI gt25
  • 5 men, 7 women BMI gt30
  • Prevalence of DM in
  • males
  • 2 (CI 0-3.7) at 25-34 to 22 (14.4-29.1) at
    age 65-74
  • females
  • 1.4 (0-4.6) at 25-34 to 29 (21.4-37.3) in age
    65-74.
  • Over 70 were unaware they had DM (Janus et al,
    1997)

8
Complications prevalence in Chinese
  • in NIDDM, HK Chinese
  • 22 (95 non-proliferative retinopathy)
  • 4 clinical nephropathy
  • 13 clinical neuropathy (Wang Lam, 1998)
  • Nephropathy OR raised in Chinese( McGill, et al
    1996)
  • Mainland diabetic patients (Xu et al, 1997)
  • 50 hypertensive 45 neuropathy
  • 37 retinopathy (4.5 blind)
  • 25 IHD 23 proteinuria
  • 12 stroke 1 amputation

9
Risk factors for complications
  • Chinese, Malays and Indians NIDDM vs.Cauca.
  • Those with NIDDM had
  • higher mean body mass indices, waist-hip ratios
    and abdominal diameters
  • more hypertension, higher triglycerides, lower
    LDL
  • (Hughes et al, 1998)
  • Retinopathy in NIDDM Asian Indian, Chinese, and
    Creole Mauritians - vs Caucasians seen with
  • increasing duration of diabetes,
  • higher fasting plasma glucose, systolic blood
    pressure, and urinary albumin concentration,
  • decreasing body mass index (Dowse et al, 1998)

10
  • Total physical activity independent predictor of
    2-h post-load glucose concentration after
    controlling for BMI, waist-hip ratio, age, and
    family history of NIDDM. (Pereira, et al, 1995)
  • Visceral fat accumulation is associated with
    dyslipidemia, hypertension, insulin resistance,
    and albuminuria in (HK) Chinese patients with
    NIDDM (Anderson, et al, 1997)
  • Therefore, inactivity, BMI, longer DM raise risk
    for complications.

11
Cause or effect?
  • Although obesity, especially abdominal obesity,
    is the commonest cause of complications such as
    type 2 diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidaemia, and
    cardiovascular diseases, doctors most often use
    drugs to treat the complications rather than the
    underlying condition.
  • So, these symptoms of unhealthy lifestyle are
    treated as causes when they are in fact, effects.

12
Etiology of complications Barriers to prevention
  • Biological
  • genetic - unalterable, brittle DM
  • Lifestyle
  • obesity, diet, inactivity, smoking
  • Attitudinal
  • DM common and accepted emphasis on genetics
    minimization of efforts to prevent
    aversion to activity in HK Chinese cultural
    belief that fatgood overeating common and
    gluttony norm.

13
  • Service
  • inadequate screening for DM
  • lack of continuity of care
  • failure to screen for complications
  • Psychological
  • poor compliance with diet, activity and
    medication leads to poor insulin control.
  • Poor DPR
  • little understanding of consequences of poor
    control
  • helplessness - cant do anything about disease
    -only doctors can cure.

14
Key contributions to barriers
  • Incomplete / inadequate detection and follow-up
  • Lack of organized shared care between specialist
    and GP
  • Discontinuity of care
  • Poor medical record keeping
  • Little attention paid to effective patient
    education
  • Little attention given to importance of DPR

15
Screening for type 2 DM?
  • Benefits of early detection and treatment of
    undiagnosed diabetes have not been proved
  • Effectiveness of diabetes screening in reducing
    cardiovascular disease depends on disease
    prevalence, background cardiovascular risk, and
    risk reduction in those screened and treated
  • Disadvantages of screening are important and
    should be quantified

16
Screening?
  • Universal screening is unmerited, but targeted
    screening in specific subgroups may be justified
  • Clinical management of people with established
    diabetes should be optimised before a screening
    programme is considered.
  • (Wareham Griffin, BMJ, 2001, 322, 986.)

17
Conclusions
  • How important are these complications?
  • DM currently most common important known
    endocrine disorder in HK affecting about 10 of
    population.
  • Prevalence of complications 20-30. 2-3 of HK
    popn. will have complications if present rates
    persist 7 million/100x0.3 21,000 with
    avoidable complications.
  • Barriers are mostly to do with poor service
    organization, failure of adherence and screening.

18
Further reading
  • American Diabetic Association
  • Poems
  • UK Study reducing risk of complications
  • Fitness protocol
  • Screening guidelines
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