Management of Hyperglycemia

Management of Hyperglycemia

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Healthy eating, weight control, increased physical activity Metformin high low risk neutral/loss GI/lactic acidosis low If needed to reach individualized HbA1c target after ~3 months, proceed to two-drug combination (order not meant to denote any specific preference): Metformin + DPP-4 Inhibitor intermediate low risk neutral rarec high Metformin + GLP-1 receptor agonist high low risk loss Glc high Metformin + Insulin (usually basal) highest high risk gain hypoglycemiac variable If needed to reach individualized HbA1c target after ~3 months, proceed to three-drug combination (order not meant to denote any specific preference): Metformin + DPP-4 Inhibitor + or or SUb TZD Insulind Metformin + GLP-1 receptor agonist + or or SUb TZD Insulind Metformin + Insulin (usually basal) + TZD or or DPP-4-i GLP-1-RA If combination therapy that includes basal insulin has failed to achieve HbA1c target after 3-6 months, proceed to a more complex insulin strategy, usually in combination with one or two non-insulin agents: (multiple daily doses) Insuline d Usually a basal insulin (NPH, glargine, detemir) in combination with noninsulin agents. e Certain noninsulin agents may be continued with insulin (see full text guidelines). Refer to Figure 7 for details on regimens. Consider beginning at this stage if patient presents with severe hyperglycemia (≥ 300-350 mg/dL [≥ 16.7-19.4 mmol/L]; HbA1c ≥ 10.0-12.0%) with or without catabolic features (weight loss, ketosis, etc.). 5

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