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[A case of an elderly diabetic patient with dementia effectively treated with weekly exenatide].

Nihon Ronen Igakkai Zasshi · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

A 74-year-old man with poorly controlled diabetes (blood sugar levels around 318 mg/dl and HbA1c of 10.6%) and dementia struggled with daily insulin injections. After switching to a once-weekly injection of the GLP-1 drug exenatide, his HbA1c dropped from 10.7% to 7.1% in five months, with only minor skin irritation as a side effect.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNihon Ronen Igakkai Zasshi, 2014
Citations0
Relative citation ratio0.00
NIH percentile0
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Alzheimers

Abstract

A 74-year-old man with diabetes mellitus since 64 years of age had been treated with glimepiride, metformin and alogliptin; however, his glycemic control remained poor, i.e., a casual blood glucose level of 318 mg/dl, HbA1c level of 10.6% and glycated albumin level of 24.9%. Although his blood glucose level improved with intensive insulin therapy, he exhibited dementia with an MMSE score of 9/30 and was unable to continue insulin injections by himself, thus rejecting his family's help. The extended-release form of the GLP-1 agonist exenatide (Bydureon(®)) was recently introduced in Japan. This new anti-diabetic agent enables the administration of once-weekly type 2 diabetes treatment that delivers a continuous dose of exenatide in a single weekly injection. We employed weekly exenatide therapy in combination with oral hypoglycemic agents in this case. The patient visited our outpatient clinic for injections every week, showing a remarkable improvement in his HbA1c level, from 10.7% to 7.1% in five months. Subcutaneous induration was the only side effect of weekly exenatide injection. Weekly exenatide therapy can be easily managed by other caregivers and is expected to be a useful treatment approach in elderly diabetic patients with dementia.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25327373 ↗

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