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<title>Master of Medicine in Emergency Medicine (Dissertations)</title>
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<dc:date>2026-04-07T12:31:26Z</dc:date>
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<title>Beta cell function, insulin resistance and glycemic control in type 2 diabetes mellitus</title>
<link>http://dissertations.umu.ac.ug/xmlui/handle/123456789/1006</link>
<description>Beta cell function, insulin resistance and glycemic control in type 2 diabetes mellitus
Karatunga, Pascal
Diabetes Mellitus (DM) patients may be categorized into two major groups: type 1 - and type 2 &#13;
diabetes. Beta cell failure and insulin resistance is the hall mark of type 2 diabetes. Knowledge &#13;
on the pathophysiology of diabetes improves clinical management. There is scanty data on beta &#13;
cell function and insulin resistance in type 2 diabetes patients in Uganda. This study investigated&#13;
beta cell function, insulin resistance and glycaemic control in type 2 diabetes patients attending &#13;
St. Francis Hospital, Nsambya, Kampala&#13;
Study objective: To describe beta cell function, insulin resistance and glycemic control among&#13;
type 2 DM patients at Nsambya hospital, Kampala Uganda.&#13;
Methods: A cross sectional study was conducted among out – patients at Nsambya hospital, &#13;
diagnosed with DM at ages above 30 years, on oral hypoglycemic agents and of less than 10 &#13;
years DM duration. Venous blood samples were drawn and the patients’ fasting blood glucose, &#13;
fasting serum C – peptide and HbA1c levels were determined. Their respective insulin resistance&#13;
(HOMA2 IR), insulin sensitivity (HOMA2 %S) and beta cell function (HOMA2% B×HOMA2 &#13;
%S) were estimated using the HOMA2 evaluation tool. Statistical analysis was done using SPSS &#13;
version 20. &#13;
Results: Eighty one study participants were selected from the type 2 DM Clinic at Nsambya &#13;
hospital. The mean beta cell function was 0.397 + 0.052 (Standard Error of Mean (SEM)). The &#13;
proportion of beta cell dysfunction (HOMA2% B×HOMA2 %S &lt; 1.0) was 94.4 %. The mean &#13;
Insulin Resistance was 3.3 + 0.4 (SEM). The proportion of insulin resistance (HOMA2 IR &gt; 2.5) &#13;
was 35.8 % (29/81). Twenty seven percent of study participants had severe insulin resistance &#13;
(HOMA2 IR &gt; 3.0). Sixty eight percent (55/81) of study participants had suboptimal glycemic &#13;
control (HbA1c &gt; 7.0 %). There were no correlations of statistical significance between &#13;
participants’ baseline characteristics with beta cell function nor insulin resistance.&#13;
Conclusions: Beta cell dysfunction was a more predominant factor (94.4%) than insulin &#13;
resistance (35.8 %) among type 2 DM patients at Nsambya hospital. The proportion of &#13;
suboptimal glycemic control was high (68%). There were no correlations between patients’&#13;
baseline characteristics with beta cell dysfunction nor insulin resistance.&#13;
Recommendations:&#13;
1. It is recommended that case control and / or prospective cohort studies with larger type 2 &#13;
DM patient numbers would provide a better understanding of the evolution of beta cell &#13;
function and insulin resistance as a means of accounting for differences in individual &#13;
physiology and the multi – factorial nature of dependence of glycemic control in type 2 &#13;
DM.
Dr. Bahendeka K. Silver; Dr. Mwebaze M. Raymond
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<dc:date>2015-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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