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September 21, 2004 |
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In This Issue...
WATCH THE PREVIEWS It is estimated that more than 18 million people in the US have diabetes. There are serious lifestyle and health consequences for sufferers. The great news is that if the warning signs are caught early, the vast majority of the more than 1.3 million people who are at risk for diabetes each year can avoid developing this life-threatening disease. The challenge, according to Claresa Levetan, MD, division chief of endocrinology at Drexel University College of Medicine, is that prediabetes, a condition that foreshadows diabetes, has no symptoms. You feel fine, with no warning signs of danger, until one day you go to the doctor for something unrelated and it's discovered. By then, however, prediabetes has already damaged your body. WHAT EXACTLY IS PREDIABETES? Prediabetes has a simple definition and is easy to diagnose. It simply means that your blood sugar levels are too high but you don't have diabetes yet. How do you know? If blood tests taken during your annual physical show that your sugar levels are too high, your doctor will recommend one of two follow-up blood tests: the Fasting Plasma Glucose test (FPG) or the Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT). The FPG test is easier to administer, because it measures fasting blood sugar first thing in the morning, before you eat anything. Be sure to tell your doctor the time and composition of your evening meal. This will add precision to the results. For the OGTT, you drink a high-glucose liquid, and then remain in the doctor's office for two or more hours while your blood is tested several times. This is a more detailed test, but a little unrealistic, since few of us would consider consuming the 100 grams of glucose used in the test in one sitting. Hence a possible condition may be identified that does not exist in everyday life. WHO SHOULD BE SCREENED FOR PREDIABETES AND WHEN? Type 2 diabetes, the kind that people develop as an adult or child, has both a genetic component as well as a lifestyle component that puts people at risk. Although experts don't yet know why, if diabetes runs in your family, you're at increased risk. As for lifestyle indicators, believe it or not there is such a thing as pre-prediabetes and it's called metabolic syndrome. I talked about metabolic syndrome and its connection to heart disease and stroke in the June 7, 2004, issue of Daily Health News. Now, doctors have found that metabolic syndrome also is an indicator of prediabetes. Indicators of metabolic syndrome
At what age do you need to worry? At this year's Diabetes Mellitus Consensus Conference held by the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, it was decided that the screening age for diabetes should be lowered to age 30 from age 45 for people at high risk in order to detect prediabetes early. HOW DO YOU PREVENT METABOLIC SYNDROME FROM TURNING INTO PREDIABETES? The good news is that both metabolic syndrome and prediabetes improve markedly with a good diet, supplementation and exercise. While that seems to be the answer to every health problem lately, it's a fact we all have to face. Too much fast food and too much television are the culprits, says Andrew Drexler, MD, director of the New York Diabetes Program and clinical associate professor at NYU School of Medicine. If you don't change the way you live your life, you raise your risk of developing diabetes dramatically. Some doctors have begun prescribing metformin (Glucophage), a drug taken by diabetics, to reduce blood sugar levels in people with prediabetes, but Dr. Drexler doesn't believe this is the best treatment. He says that diet and exercise should be your first line of attack. Dr. Rubman's first line of defense? Nutritional supplementation along with dietary and exercise changes. He suggests taking chromium, a multiple B supplement, and lowering your intake of high-glycemic carbohydrates. Read on for how to avoid prediabetes... SAY GOOD-BYE TO WEAK BONES, LOW ENERGY AND ANY AGE-RELATED AILMENT Major new studies prove that you have the power to ward off heart disease, stroke and cancer
MAKING CHANGE A REALITY Carolyn Robertson, who is board certified in advanced diabetes management and is a certified diabetes educator, offers some practical suggestions that make life changes easy...
Consider the fact that, should your metabolic syndrome or prediabetes develop into diabetes, you run the risk of losing your vision, kidney function and even your legs. (The disruption of metabolic control causes damage to both the small and large vessels of multiple organs. The eyes, kidneys and lower extremities are especially vulnerable.) With awful consequences like these, those snacks hardly seem worth it. Be well,
LOVED ONES NEED NOT SUFFER MENTAL DECLINE! NOT ANYMORE! Ray Sahelian, MD, put the medical world in an uproar with his discoveries that turn ordinary people into super-brains -- and rapidly reverse "incurable" mental decline. Thousands of patients are proving now that his powerful therapies work, and skepticism is yielding to thunderous applause. Reverse age-related memory loss with stunning speed
Sources... Watch the Previews
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