Aims: To provide a pathophysiological basis for distinguishing metabolic variants of the frailty phenotype in older adults with type 2 diabetes.
Methods: We have made an in-depth review of the possible mechanisms in diabetes, ageing and frailty that will alter allow us to describe phenotypic changes which might assist in predicting responses to particular glucose-lowering therapy.
Results: Our review has enable us to describe with some confidence a sarcopenic obese phenotype and an anorexic malnourished phenotype.
The prevalence of diabetes is increasing due to increasing aging of the population. Hypoglycemia is a common diabetes-related complication in old age especially in patients with multiple comorbidities and frailty. Hypoglycemia and frailty appear to have a bidirectional relationship reenforcing each other in a negative downhill spiral that leads to an increased risk of adverse events including disability and mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Current literature on COVID-19 pandemic has identified diabetes as a common comorbidity in patients affected. However, the evidence that diabetes increases the risk of infection, effect of diabetes on outcomes and characteristics of patients at risk is not clear.
Objectives: To explore the prevalence of diabetes in COVID-19 pandemic, effect of diabetes on clinical outcomes and to characterise the patients with diabetes affected by COVID-19.
Older people living with dementia, who are likely frail with multiple comorbidities, appear particularly vulnerable to COVID-19. Care for older people with comorbid dementia and COVID-19 is a challenge to health care professionals due to their complex needs. COVID-19 is a respiratory disease which typically presents with respiratory symptoms; however, in older people with dementia, it may present atypically with delirium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSN Compr Clin Med
August 2020
Delirium is a potentially fatal acute brain dysfunction that is characterised by inattention and fluctuating mental changes. It is indicative of an acute serious organ failure or acute infection. Delirium is also associated with undesirable health outcomes that include prolonged hospital stay, long-term cognitive decline and increased mortality.
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