Thursday, December 25, 2008
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Thursday, November 6, 2008
Diabetes rate doubles in U.S. in last 10 years
The highest rates were in the South, according to the first state-by-state review of new diagnoses. The worst was in West Virginia, where about 13 in 1,000 adults were diagnosed with the disease in 2005-07. The lowest was in Minnesota, where the rate was 5 in 1,000.
Nationally, the rate of new cases climbed from about 5 per 1,000 in the mid-1990s to 9 per 1,000 in the middle of this decade.
Sugar Studied for Treatment of Diabetes
DEPRESSION INCREASES MORTALITY RATE IN PEOPLE WITH DIABETES
A new study of Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes discovered individuals who were depressed experienced a higher death rate than diabetics who were not depressed. The findings are published in the October 2008 Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Lead author Dr. Wayne Katon, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington (UW), noted that previous research indicates that depression and diabetes is a potentially lethal mix among young to middle-aged patients. Depression also puts patients at greater risk of complications from their diabetes. This more recent study suggests that depression is also a risk factor for mortality in older patients with diabetes. Most Medicare beneficiaries, like the ones in this study, are over age 65. The mean age of the participants was 75.6 years. The study tracked 10,704 Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes who were enrolled in a disease management program in Florida.
They were surveyed at the start of the study with a health assessment questionnaire. Evidence of depression among members of the group came from physician diagnosis, patient reports of having a prescription for an antidepressant in the year before the survey, or patient answers to a brief screening test. For the next two years, the research team recorded the death and cause of death of participants through bi-monthly checks of Medicare claims and eligibility files, or from phone calls with the participants’ families. The research team found that patients with both diabetes and depression had an increased risk of about 36 percent to 38 percent of dying from any cause during the two-year follow-up. Participants with a physician diagnosis of depression were significantly younger than their cohorts, more likely to be female, had more severe medical illness, were less likely to be African-American, and more likely to be Hispanic.
Thursday, September 4, 2008
St. John's - Story
Diabetes is a serious disease, which, if not controlled, can be life threatening. It is often associated with long-term complications that can affect every system and part of the body.
Diabetes can, among other things, contribute to eye disorders and blindness, heart disease, stroke, kidney failure, amputation, and nerve damage. It can affect pregnancy and cause birth defects, as well.
Although diabetes is a chronic and incurable disease (with the exception of gestational diabetes), with proper medical care, clinical therapies, diet, hygiene, and exercise, symptoms and complications can be successfully treated and managed.
St. John's is committed to helping you successfully manage your diabetes. Our Certified Diabetes Educators (CDEs) provide a variety of services for all people with diabetes - from newly diagnosed diabetics to people who have had diabetes for many years.
St. John's diabetes self-management training and education programs include the latest information on nutrition and meal planning, shopping for food, eating out, medication, insulin administration, exercise, blood glucose monitoring, managing blood sugar, psychological adjustment, prevention of complications and insulin pumps. See more.
DIABETES and Depleted Uranium DU Global impacts of Radiation
[source: New York Times Jan. 9, 20061 Global diabetes map from NY Times Jan 9, 2006.] Its a fallout/rainout map from atmospheric testing radiation and you can see that the jet stream is the main transport mechanism. US map indicates that the highest diabetes rates in the US are along the Gulf Coast states where the Depleted Uranium is carried across the Atlantic on Westerlies and rained out where the highest rainfall occurs along the Gulf Coast. Basically the US Govt. is shipping the most radioactive milk from dairies around nuke plants into black and poor inner city communities. Wash. DC looks the same and we have proved it with US Govt. measurements of rad in milk by city. [Jay Gould, DEADLY DECEIT: LOW LEVEL RADIATION HIGH LEVEL COVERUP, Chapter "Infant Mortality and Milk"].
See more.
35th World Vegetarian Congress 'Food for all our futures'
My talk this afternoon is going to be on diabetes and the vegan diet. Unfortunately there have been few studies that have looked at the vegan diet and diabetes although a few have suggested that a vegan diet can relieve symptoms and perhaps prevent diabetes. It has been suggested that approximately 80-95% of cases of type 2 diabetes could be prevented and in Finland last year, it was demonstrated that with lifestyle interventions, increased activity, low fat diet and weight loss, the risk of diabetes was reduced by 58%. (Tuomilehto et al 2001)
This afternoon I wish to highlight the benefits of the vegan diet and how it may prevent against diabetes. I believe that often as vegans we have to prove that we can be healthy and getting enough of this, that and the other but we forget to look at the other side of the coin, how protective the vegan diet can be. However, I also wish to raise the fact that vegans are not immune from western diseases and still need to examine their lifestyle. Over recent years the diet of vegans and vegetarians has changed considerably with many high fat, high salt, high sugar convenience foods being available and there are an increasing number of vegans and vegetarians eating poor diets, taking less activity and putting on weight. However, there is no doubt that a vegan diet can be protective and perhaps prevent many western diseases and one of these may be diabetes! See more.
Calcium Imaging May Improve Cardiac Risk Picture in Diabetes
Using computed tomography (CT) to image the calcification of coronary arteries may be a valuable way of assessing cardiac risk—and more accurate than traditional means—according to researchers presenting at the 2006 Cardiometabolic Health Congress, held October 19–21 in Boston.
Although the risk of coronary artery disease (CAD) mortality and morbidity is two to four times greater in people with diabetes, the tools available to clinicians to accurately assess CAD in people with diabetes are lacking, says Paolo Raggi, MD, of Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans.
"Diabetic patients... have it worse, with higher mortality after coronary artery bypass graft surgery and PCTA [percutaneous transluminal angioplasty]," Raggi says.
The usual methods of assessing coronary artery health, based on detecting obstructed arteries, often are not useful in people with diabetes because their acute coronary syndrome often occurs without stenosis. See more.My Son has Diabetes - Story
If you would like to read the description that goes with the pictures then you'll have to go to my page. Otherwise you can make up your own little story to go with the picture. See more the story.
Vascular Health and Diabetes
If there is not enough insulin activity, or the body does not use the insulin effectively, the body's blood glucose rises. This condition with high blood glucose levels is called diabetes.
Glucose - The body requires a certain amount of sugar (glucose) in the blood. Too much causes damage to the body proteins. Too little prevents body cells from working properly. The amount of glucose is controlled by insulin.
Pancreas - Insulin comes from the pancreas, a gland lying just below the stomach. Insulin goes straight through the blood stream to the tissues where it acts. See more.
Diabetic Diet Sample
While searching for a great article to kick off our Diabetic Diet Sample blog, we came across this wonderfully informative piece and knew we just had to add it here for your perusal!
Eating Well With Diabetes
It is possible for the person with diabetes to eat well and still manage their illness. The diabetic should seek out great recipes that will allow them to keep their blood sugar under control and their disease in check.
The person who is following the diabetic diet is actually eating a great deal healthier than the average person. The diabetes community has rallied around the nutritional approach to managing diabetes and come up with some wonderful and delicious recipes that are diabetic friendly. If you take a look online you will find a great many recipes and tips to making sure that your diabetic diet is varied and delicious.
All you have to do is take a look at the diabetes forums to see the kind of help and support that is available to the newly diagnosed patient. These forums are a great source of recipes and eating tips to keep the diabetic in new recipes for a long time to come. This is just what the diabetic person needs to help them on their road to a new healthy lifestyle. See more.
Diabetes - What Are the Effects?
What is it about the effects of diabetes that can alter your life? That's a question on the minds of many who have been diagnosed with the illness.
You can observe lots of consequences in the symptoms of diabetes: urinating frequently, as much as every sixty minutes, is one of them and because of this, diabetics are also frequently thirsty. In addition, because diabetics lose some of the glucose (energy) they require via their urine, they very often feel weak as well as tired.
If the diabetes is left untreated, the individual will find they have frequent infections of the urinary tract. They may also be aware of their toes and fingers prickling because their veins and arteries have narrowed. Their vision could dim because unabsorbed glucose is also released into eye fluid. Male diabetics can become impotent and female diabetics may observe their menstrual periods stop.
Once diabetes is detected, the illness can be controlled, either by diet alone (for type 2) or with the use of insulin (type 1). One of the everyday effects of diabetes is that the individual must determine how to watch their blood sugar levels regularly; many times each day. To get this done, the affected individual must prick their finger to get a a small amount of of blood. The blood is placed onto a test strip and inserted into a hand-held instrument to gauge its glucose level. With the passage of time, the tops of the fingers become painful.
See more.Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Diabetes Facts
What is diabetes?
Diabetes is a disease in which the body either fails to produce any insulin (type 1, also called insulin-dependent or juvenile-onset), or the insulin that it does produce is unable to adequately trigger the conversion of food into energy (type 2, also called non-insulin-dependent or adult-onset).
Who has diabetes?
Federal statistics estimate that 18.2 million children and adults in the United States ? 6.3 percent of the population ? have diabetes. While an estimated 13 million of these have been diagnosed with diabetes, 5.2 million are estimated to have type 2 diabetes and not know it. Most people with diabetes have type 2; an estimated 800,000 have type 1. About 1 million people age 20 or older will be diagnosed with diabetes this year. Diabetes is more prevalent among Native Americans, African Americans, Hispanic Americans and Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders. An estimated 20 million people in the U.S have pre-diabetes, a condition that occurs when one has higher than normal blood glucose levels, but not high enough to be diagnosed as having type 2 diabetes. (Research shows that if action is taken to control glucose levels, those with pre-diabetes can prevent or delay the onset of diabetes.)
What are the symptoms of diabetes?
- Excessive thirst
- Frequent urination
- Weight loss
- Blurred vision
- Increased hunger
- Frequent skin, bladder or gum infections
- Irritability
- Tingling or numbness in hands or feet
- Slow to heal wounds
- Extreme unexplained fatigue
- Sometimes there are no symptoms (type 2 diabetes)Who is at greatest risk for developing diabetes?
People who:
- are 45 or over
- are overweight
- are habitually physically inactive
- have previously been identified as having IFG (impaired fasting glucose) or IGT (impaired glucose tolerance)
- have a family history of diabetes
- have members of certain ethnic groups (including Asian American, African-American, Hispanic American, and Native American)
- have had gestational diabetes or have given birth to a child weighing more than 9 pounds
- have elevated blood pressure
- have an HDL cholesterol level (the ?good? cholesterol) of 35 mg/dl or lower and/or a triglyceride level of 250 mg/dl or higher
- have polycystic ovary syndrome
- have a history of vascular disease
What are the long-term complications of diabetes?
- People with diabetes are two to four more times more likely to develop heart disease or have a stroke than those who don't have diabetes
- Diabetes is the leading cause of new blindness among adults between 20 and 74 years old.
- Diabetes is the leading cause of treated end-stage kidney disease in the U.S.
- More than 60 percent of the limb amputations in the U.S. occur among people with diabetes
- About 60-70 percent of the people with diabetes have mild to severe nerve damage
History of Diabetes
1552 B.C. |
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1st Century A.D. |
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c. 164 A.D. |
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Up to 11th Century |
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16th Century |
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Early 19th Century |
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late 1850s |
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1870s |
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19th Century |
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Late 19th Century |
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1869 |
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1889 |
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1900-1915 |
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1908 |
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1910-1920 |
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c. 1913 |
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1919 |
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1919-20 |
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October 31, 1920 |
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Summer 1921 |
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December 30, 1921 |
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1940s |
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1944 |
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1955 |
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1959 |
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1960s |
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1970 |
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1983 |
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1986 |
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Monday, August 18, 2008
AADE Survey: Taking Insulin Is a Hardship on Many—and They’re Reluctant to Talk About It With Caregivers
The “Injection Impact Report” survey, which was conducted online between June 12 and July 7, surveyed 502 people with diabetes who inject insulin using either a syringe or a pen. The survey also queried healthcare professionals who treat people with diabetes who inject insulin, including 101 primary care physicians (PCPs), 100 endocrinologists, and 100 diabetes educators.
Among the findings:
- 33 percent of respondents have experienced some level of dread related to insulin injections (eight percent strongly agreed/and 25 percent somewhat agreed)
- 14 percent of those surveyed feel that insulin injections have a negative impact on their life (three percent experience a major negative impact and 11 percent experience a moderate negative impact)
- More than 29 percent of the people surveyed feel that injecting insulin is the hardest aspect of their diabetes care (eight percent strongly agreed and 21 percent somewhat agreed).
- 52 percent do not proactively discuss their concerns regarding the physical and emotional aspects of injecting with their healthcare provider.
Diabetic Diet Plan
The optimal way to plan a diabetic diet meal is to first assess the nutritional needs of a person with diabetes and the amounts of fat, protein, carbohydrate, and then calculating the corresponding total calories needed per day. >This information is converted into recommendations for amounts and types of foods to be included in the daily diet. Every person having diabetes must consult a Registered Dietitian to prepare for his diabetic diet plan. However, the total number of meals and snacks and their timing throughout the day can differ for each person, depending on his or her nutritional needs, lifestyle, and the action and timing of medications. But then the rest of it is pretty much up to you. You get your meal plan 'budget', and then you decide how to spend it at each meal. Just as a non-diabetic can't eat cookies and cakes all day long and expect to be healthy, if you have diabetes you have to eat a balanced diet to remain healthy. But within limits, and with proper education, if you have diabetes you can eat whatever anybody else does.
In general, a nutrition plan for a person with diabetes includes
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10 to 20 percent of calories from protein
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no more than 30 percent of calories from fats (with no more than 10 percent from saturated fats)
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and the remaining 50 to 60 percent from carbohydrates.
Given below are the ideal nutrition portions for your diet, according to size categories.
Diabetic Diet Plan (1200-1600 Calories)This diabetic diet plan is perfect for if you are a small woman who exercises, a small or medium woman who wants to lose weight or even a medium woman who does not exercise much. Choose this many servings from these food groups to have 1,200 to 1,600 calories a day:
· 6 starches
· 2 milk and yogurt
· 3 vegetables
· 2 meat or meat substitute
· 2 fruit
· Up to 3 fats
Diabetic Diet
If you have diabetes, your body cannot make or properly use insulin. This leads to high blood glucose, or sugar, levels in your blood. Healthy eating helps to reduce your blood sugar. It is a critical part of managing your diabetes, because controlling your blood sugar can prevent the complications of diabetes.
Wise food choices are a foundation of diabetes treatment. Diabetes experts suggest meal plans that are flexible and take your lifestyle and other health needs into account. A registered dietitian can help you design a meal plan.
Healthy diabetic eating includes
- Limiting sweets
- Eating often
- Being careful about when and how many carbohydrates you eat
- Eating lots of whole-grain foods, fruits and vegetables
- Eating less fat
- Limiting your use of alcohol
- Diabetes - Meal Planning(Patient Education Institute) - Requires Flash Player
Also available in Spanish
- Recipe and Meal Planner Guide: Eating Healthy and Staying Fit to Control and Manage Diabetes(National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases)
Also available in Spanish
- What I Need to Know about Eating and Diabetes(National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases)
Also available in Spanish
Diabetic Wound Care
Diabetes is the leading cause of nontraumatic lower extremity amputations in the United States, and approximately 14 to 24 percent of patients with diabetes who develop a foot ulcer have an amputation. Research, however, has shown that the development of a foot ulcer is preventable.
Who Can Get a Diabetic Foot Ulcer?
Anyone who has diabetes can develop a foot ulcer. Native Americans, African Americans, Hispanics and older men are more likely to develop ulcers. People who use insulin are at a higher risk of developing a foot ulcer, as are patients with diabetes-related kidney, eye, and heart disease. Being overweight and using alcohol and tobacco also play a role in the development of foot ulcers.
How do Diabetic Foot Ulcers Form?
Ulcers form due to a combination of factors, such as lack of feeling in the foot, poor circulation, foot deformities, irritation (such as friction or pressure), and trauma, as well as duration of diabetes. Patients who have diabetes for many years can develop neuropathy, a reduced or complete lack of feeling in the feet due to nerve damage caused by elevated blood glucose levels over time. The nerve damage often can occur without pain and one may not even be aware of the problem. Your podiatric physician can test feet for neuropathy with a simple and painless tool called a monofilament.
Vascular disease can complicate a foot ulcer, reducing the body’s ability to heal and increasing the risk for an infection. Elevations in blood glucose can reduce the body’s ability to fight off a potential infection and also retard healing.
What is Type 1 Diabetes?
The most commonly diagnosed form of type 1 diabetes is juvenile diabetes, or, insulin-dependent diabetes. People with juvenile type 1 diabetes have an inherited genetic predisposition towards developing diabetes (the genes are different for type 1 and type 2 but both have a genetic aspect involved). Many people have these genes but will never develop the disease. For those that do become diabetic, something triggers the body to attack and destroy the insulin producing beta cells in the pancreas.
Triggers for type 1 diabetes are thought in include certain viruses (including rotaviruses), chemical, or some other environmental factor. Visit our general diabetes information page for causes of diabetes, genetic transmission rates of diabetes for type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and other diseases and disorders that are associated with diabetes.
Other diseases that affect persons with diabetes at a higher rate than in the general population include Addison's Disease, Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis. celiac disease (sprue, or gluten intolerance), and polycystic ovarian syndrome. Anyone diagnosed with type 1 diabetes should also be tested for these.Juvenile type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease. An autoimmune disease is when the body attacks and destroys good cells and tissues mistaking them as foreign intruders. With type 1 diabetes the insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas are slowly destroyed and eventually they fail to produce insulin. When this happens a person will need to take insulin to live.
See more.
Pre-Diabetes
Before people develop type 2 diabetes, they almost always have "pre-diabetes" -- blood glucose levels that are higher than normal but not yet high enough to be diagnosed as diabetes. There are 57 million people in the United States who have pre-diabetes. Recent research has shown that some long-term damage to the body, especially the heart and circulatory system, may already be occurring during pre-diabetes.
Research has also shown that if you take action to manage your blood glucose when you have pre-diabetes, you can delay or prevent type 2 diabetes from ever developing. Together with the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the American Diabetes Association published a Position Statement on "The Prevention or Delay of Type 2 Diabetes" to help guide health care professionals in treating their patients with pre-diabetes.
There is a lot you can do yourself to know your risks for pre-diabetes and to take action to prevent diabetes if you have, or are at risk for, pre-diabetes. The American Diabetes Association has a wealth of resources for people with diabetes. People with pre-diabetes can expect to benefit from much of the same advice for good nutrition and physical activity. The links on this page are cornerstones of successful management of pre-diabetes.
Women and Diabetes
Today, almost 21 million children and adults in the US have diabetes -- including 9.7 million women -- and almost one third of them do not know it. Diabetes can be especially hard on women. The burden of diabetes on women is unique, because the disease can affect both mothers and their unborn children. Diabetes can cause difficulties during pregnancy such as a miscarriage or a baby born with birth defects. Women with diabetes are also more likely to have a heart attack, and at a younger age, than women without diabetes.
Diabetes is the fifth-deadliest disease in the United States, and it has no cure. For women who do not currently have diabetes, pregnancy brings the risk of gestational diabetes. Gestational diabetes develops in 2% to 5% of all pregnancies but disappears when a pregnancy is over. Women who have had gestational diabetes or have given birth to a baby weighting more than 9 pounds are at an increased risk for developing type 2 diabetes later in life.
The prevalence of diabetes is at least 2-4 times higher among African American, Hispanic/Latino, American Indian, and Asian/Pacific Islander women than among white women. The risk for diabetes also increases with age. Because of the increasing lifespan of women and the rapid growth of minority populations, the number of women in the United States at high risk for diabetes and its complications is increasing.
All About Diabetes
Diabetes is a disease in which the body does not produce or properly use insulin. Insulin is a hormone that is needed to convert sugar, starches and other food into energy needed for daily life. The cause of diabetes continues to be a mystery, although both genetics and environmental factors such as obesity and lack of exercise appear to play roles.
There are 23.6 million children and adults in the United States, or 7.8% of the population, who have diabetes. While an estimated 17.9 million have been diagnosed with diabetes, unfortunately, 5.7 million people (or nearly one quarter) are unaware that they have the disease.
In order to determine whether or not a patient has pre-diabetes or diabetes, health care providers conduct a Fasting Plasma Glucose Test (FPG) or an Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT). Either test can be used to diagnose pre-diabetes or diabetes. The American Diabetes Association recommends the FPG because it is easier, faster, and less expensive to perform.
With the FPG test, a fasting blood glucose level between 100 and 125 mg/dl signals pre-diabetes. A person with a fasting blood glucose level of 126 mg/dl or higher has diabetes.
In the OGTT test, a person's blood glucose level is measured after a fast and two hours after drinking a glucose-rich beverage. If the two-hour blood glucose level is between 140 and 199 mg/dl, the person tested has pre-diabetes. If the two-hour blood glucose level is at 200 mg/dl or higher, the person tested has diabetes.
See more.