Diabetes Edutool: Tutorial 1 Food and insulin. Introduction During these tutorials, the individual effects that can affect the blood glucose will first.

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Presentation transcript:

Diabetes Edutool: Tutorial 1 Food and insulin

Introduction During these tutorials, the individual effects that can affect the blood glucose will first be explained separately The effects will then be combined to explain how all of them together will affect the blood glucose, as in real life

When we eat, our bodies break the starches in food down into a simple sugar called glucose Glucose

The glucose is first absorbed into our bloodstream

Our bloodstream moves the glucose around our bodies

Our bodies use the glucose for energy

All the glucose absorbed after a meal cannot be used at once The body must store some for later

Glucose Insulin To store glucose, the body produces the hormone insulin Insulin works like a key that unlocks the door of our cells to let the glucose in

Our pancreas makes insulin

In some people the pancreas is not able to make insulin This condition is called type 1 diabetes

Without insulin, the excess glucose in our blood cannot be stored This causes high blood glucose levels

High blood glucose can damage your body

To prevent this, people with type 1 diabetes inject insulin when they eat

Food, stress and exercise change our blood glucose levels We must first learn more about this, before working out how much insulin to use

We call one equivalent teaspoon of sugar, one = 1 1

Using for food makes energy calculation of food easy = 3 = 8 = 10

The more we eat, the higher our blood glucose rises 3108

When we stress, our blood glucose also rises

We also use to see how much energy we expend during exercise ≈ 20 Running for one hour

The more we exercise, the lower our blood glucose goes

BLOOD GLUCOSE We need to balance food and stress with exercise and insulin

To show you how, we will use Diabetes Edutool It shows you how the blood glucose of people with type 1 diabetes changes

The oval shape in the middle shows the blood glucose level

The colour of the oval means: Blood glucose normal Blood glucose too high or too low Blood glucose slightly high or slightly low Blood glucose 5 mmol/L Blood glucose 14 mmol/L Blood glucose 4 mmol/L

Let’s look at an example: Arnold has type 1 diabetes What happens to his blood glucose after… How much insulin will he need? + ?

Before we start, we must first measure Arnold’s blood glucose level It is 5 mmol/L

To set the starting glucose level, click on the + or – sign in the oval

Arnold starts off with a normal blood glucose level of 5 mmol/L

To add the we use the database

This arrow went up to show the eaten

The blood glucose is now high This is what Arnold’s blood glucose would be if nothing was done

To add the we again use the database

The blood glucose is now very high Again, this is what Arnold’s blood glucose would be if nothing was done

If Arnold had taken some insulin before the meal, it would store the excess glucose and prevent his blood glucose from rising

To do this, we need insulin To store the excess glucose Arnold needs to take some insulin

Insulin removes excess glucose from the blood by storing it elsewhere With meals, we need enough insulin to maintain blood glucose levels in a normal range

To add the insulin, we drag the insulin arrow to the right until the blood glucose is normal

Let’s recap… 1 – We increase the insulin Insulin arrow

2- The insulin stores the glucose Energy stored arrow

3 - The blood glucose decreases as the glucose is stored Blood glucose is lowered

Let’s see the insulin in action again:

The blood glucose is now normal again 11 units of insulin were needed to maintain Arnold’s blood glucose within a normal range

Question: Arnold starts off with a blood glucose level of 7 mmol/L He plans to…. for 30 minutes How much insulin will he need? + ?

Set the blood glucose level to 7 mmol/L

Use the database to add the cake and exercise

Drag the insulin arrow to lower his blood glucose to 5 mmol/L 7 units of insulin were needed

Lessons: - Starchy foods are broken down into glucose that is absorbed into the blood - The body uses glucose for energy - Insulin is needed to unlock the cells in our bodies to let the glucose in - Food and stress increase blood glucose while insulin and exercise decrease it -- End of Tutorial 1 --