Prevention
Aspirin Therapy Not As Effective in Type 2 Diabetes Cases
Slowing Insulin Resistance
Sweet Drinks May Make Sour Future
Are You or Your Children At Risk?
Whole Fruit May Reduce Diabetes Risk
Vitamin D May Prevent Type 1 in Kids
Corie Richter
Vitamin D in Childhood May Prevent type 1 diabetes in later years according to a review in Archives of Disease in Childhood.
Aggressive Heart Management in Diabetes
Sleep Disorder May Foretell Diabetes
By Corie Richter
Case Western Reserve researchers have determined a link between sleep disordered breathing (SDB), or alterations in breathing when asleep, and type 2 diabetes. The weight of the patient was not a factor in the diabetes connection even though obesity is a known factor for SDB.
Heart Rate as a Predictor of Diabetes
By Corie Richter, PA, RN
People with a faster pulse are also more likely to have diabetes and die younger, according to research.
Experts have identified a significant relationship between resting heart rate and life expectancy. A study was undertaken at Northwestern University in Chicago. Their goal was to determine if resting heart rates of middle aged adults could predict diabetes or diabetes related death as they entered the geriatric population (65 years old and older).
Statistics can sometimes be complicated, and no less so with this study. The subjects were between 35 and 64 years of age with no signs or diagnosis of diabetes when the data was collected.
Making adjustments for body mass index (BMI) and smoking, the research revealed when individuals aged 35 to 49 had elevated resting heart rates (12 beats per minute above normal) they were 10 percent more likely to have diabetes and die sooner in old age.
While reading such information is interesting, this research begs the question of why the heart rates were elevated in the first place. If the affected individuals in the study group were out of shape to start with, it comes as no surprise they might pass on sooner than those who were physically fit. What kind of lifestyle did they lead? What kind of diet did they follow?
Diabetes Complication Rates Falling
Diabetes treaments are working!
People are avoiding more complications than they used to a year ago, according to a story about diabetes complications in USA Today. The article sites statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that shows clear trends toward people living better with diabetes.
