Alex Graveling
Aberdeen Royal Infirmary
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Featured researches published by Alex Graveling.
Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy | 2011
Radzi M Noh; Alex Graveling; Brian M Frier
Introduction: Some therapies for type 2 diabetes (T2DM) are limited by hypoglycaemia, and this underestimated side effect carries an associated morbidity and financial burden. Large trials that have examined strict glycaemic control and cardiovascular outcomes in T2DM have highlighted the potential harm of exposure to hypoglycaemia in people with coronary heart disease. Areas covered: The responses to, and the morbidity associated with, hypoglycaemia in T2DM are discussed with identification of people most at risk of severe hypoglycaemia. The evidence base for non-pharmacological strategies and the risks of hypoglycaemia associated with various treatment modalities are examined. This review provides the clinician with a rational approach to the selection of different anti-diabetes drugs to minimize the risk of hypoglycaemia. Expert opinion: When managing T2DM, insulin and insulin secretagogues should be used judiciously and glycaemic targets individualized to avoid hypoglycaemia. Incretin mimetics present a lower risk of hypoglycaemia with similar efficacy as traditional agents in treating hyperglycaemia. The potential relationship between hypoglycaemia and precipitation of acute cardiovascular events is a highly topical area of research and may help determine what glycaemic targets are appropriate in people with T2DM.
Clinical Diabetes and Endocrinology | 2015
Alex Graveling; Brian M. Frier
Driving is a complex process that places considerable demands on cognitive and physical functions. Many complications of diabetes can potentially impair driving performance, including those affecting vision, cognition and peripheral neural function. Hypoglycemia is a common side-effect of insulin and sulfonylurea therapy, impairing many cognitive domains necessary for safe driving performance. Driving simulator studies have demonstrated how driving performance deteriorates during hypoglycemia. Driving behavior that may predispose to hypoglycemia while driving is examined. Studies examining the risk of road traffic accidents in people with insulin-treated diabetes have produced conflicting results, but the potential risk of hypoglycemia-related road traffic accidents has led to many countries imposing restrictions on the type and duration of driving licenses that can be issued to drivers with diabetes. Guidance that promotes safe driving practice has been provided for drivers with insulin-treated diabetes, which is the group principally addressed in this review.
Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 2017
Alex Graveling; Brian M. Frier
Over half of all episodes of severe hypoglycaemia (requiring external help) occur during sleep, but nocturnal hypoglycaemia is often asymptomatic and unrecognised. The precise incidence of nocturnal hypoglycaemia is difficult to determine with no agreed definition, but continuous glucose monitoring has shown that it occurs frequently in people taking insulin. Attenuation of the counter-regulatory responses to hypoglycaemia during sleep may explain why some episodes are undetected and more prolonged, and modifies cardiovascular responses. The morbidity and mortality associated with nocturnal hypoglycaemia is probably much greater than realised, causing seizures, coma and cardiovascular events and affecting quality of life, mood and work performance the following day. It may induce impaired awareness of hypoglycaemia. Cardiac arrhythmias that occur during nocturnal hypoglycaemia include bradycardia and ectopics that may provoke dangerous arrhythmias. Treatment strategies are discussed that may help to minimise the frequency of nocturnal hypoglycaemia.
Archive | 2015
Jubbin Jagan Jacob; Alex Graveling; John S. Bevan
A 35-year-old woman was referred with secondary amenorrhoea and galactorrhoea. She had been trying to conceive since stopping the combined oral contraceptive 18 months earlier. Serum prolactin was found to be grossly elevated with low oestradiol. MRI demonstrated a pituitary macroadenoma in contact with the optic structures. Dopamine agonist therapy was commenced and a pregnancy was achieved after an appropriate length of treatment and interval barrier contraception. This chapter explores the differential diagnosis of secondary amenorrhoea and galactorrhoea, together with discussion of the investigation and management of prolactinomas; with special focus on pre-pregnancy planning and management during pregnancy.
British Journal of Diabetes | 2018
Alex Graveling; Brian M. Frier
Society for Endocrinology Endocrine Update 2018 | 2018
Natasha Sawhney; Alex Graveling; Prakash Abraham
Society for Endocrinology Endocrine Update 2018 | 2018
Dhruti Bhatt; Muhammad Shakeel; Kim Wong Ah-See; Prakash Abraham; Alex Graveling
Society for Endocrinology Endocrine Update 2017 | 2017
Gonnie Alkemade; Alex Graveling; Prakash Abraham
Society for Endocrinology BES 2017 | 2017
Gonnie Alkemade; Mildred Sifontes-Dubon; Dhruti Bhatt; David Smith; Rebecca Duguid; Jack Straiton; Jane Dymot; Alex Graveling; Prakash Abraham
Society for Endocrinology BES 2017 | 2017
Mildred Sifontes-Dubon; Dhruti Bhatt; Lynne Murray; Perminder Phull; Alex Graveling; Sam Philip; Prakash Abraham