THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

Promoting a low carb high fat lifestyle for the safe control of diabetes. Eat whole fresh food, more drugs are not the answer.


Welcome to the Low Carb Diabetic forum,have you signed up yet? if not then sign up and join us in the low carb community today!

2 posters

    When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1

    graham64
    graham64
    Member


    Status :
    Online
    Offline

    Male Posts : 3730
    Join date : 2014-08-10
    Location : Lancs

    When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1 Empty When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1

    Post by graham64 Mon Dec 21 2015, 21:52

    VANCOUVER – When diabetes is diagnosed from ages 15 to 30 years, type 2 patients are less likely than are type 1 patients to reach their 50th birthday, according to investigators from the University of Sydney.

    Even just a few years after diagnosis, young type 2 patients have a worse cardiovascular profile and worse cardiovascular disease, which leads to an earlier death.

    “We pay less attention to type 2 than type 1 in young people. They’re not as sick, and don’t develop [diabetic ketoacidosis] if they miss a treatment. But young type 2 is not a milder form of diabetes in young people, and its detrimental impact occurs early. Before we know what’s going on, patients are middle age, and it’s too late,” said investigator Maria Constantino, a Ph.D. candidate, nurse, and diabetes researcher and educator at the University of Sydney.

    Screening for type 2 diabetes “should start at a young age in at-risk groups,” and diabetes cardiovascular risk criteria should be reconsidered so that younger type 2 patients aren’t overlooked because of their age. Current criteria likely “lead to delay in preventive treatment” in the young, she said.

    The conclusions come from a review of diabetes patients treated since 1990 at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney (Diabetes Care. 2013 Dec; 36[12]:3863-9).

    The investigators compared 354 type 2 patients with 470 type 1 patients diagnosed from age 15-30 years. By around the age of 40 years, 11% of the type 2 patients had died, vs. 6.8% with type 1 (hazard ratio, 2.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-3.2; P = .003). Strokes, coronary artery disease, and other macrovascular complications were also far more common in the type 2 group, and they had worse hypertension and dyslipidemia despite taking more drugs to combat both. Type 2 patients also had more albuminuria and neuropathy.

    The differences occurred despite the fact that type 2 patients smoked less, had a slightly shorter duration of disease (11.6 vs. 14.7 years), and equivalent glycemic control with their type 1 counterparts, with a mean hemoglobin A1c of 8.1% in both groups. They were heavier, however, with a mean body mass index of 32.2 kg/m2 vs. 25.6 kg/m2 in type 1 patients.

    In short, young-onset type 2 is a “more lethal phenotype of diabetes. We are not saying one type of diabetes is more important; we need to conquer both.” But in young type 2 patients, “we need to focus on more than just glycemic control.” Cardiovascular risk factors are “detectable early, and treatable,” Ms. Constantino said.

    The investigators also compared their 354 young-onset type 2 patients with 1,062 patients diagnosed from age 40-50 years.

    By the time they were about 50 years old, young-onset patients were 6.5 times more likely to have died than were their age-matched peers without diabetes in the general Australian population. The peak in excess mortality for those diagnosed in their 5th decade came at about age of 65 years, with a risk of death about 2.5 times higher than nondiabetic peers in the general population.

    “The impact of type 2 is much higher the younger a person is. You can argue that in our enthusiasm to diagnose diabetes, we are casting our screening net wider and wider, and take pride in diagnosing many elderly patients with diabetes, but we should not lose sight of the fact that finding and treating an elderly person with diabetes has much less impact than finding and treating one in a young age group,” she said.

    http://www.clinicalendocrinologynews.com/specialty-focus/diabetes/single-article-page/wdc-when-diagnosed-young-type-2-diabetes-is-more-lethal-than-type-1/805746525b2b988a726eceeefce1f704.html

    It's sad but a mean A1c of 8.1% is hardly going to help those diagnosed so young
    Derek
    Derek
    Member


    Status :
    Online
    Offline

    Posts : 338
    Join date : 2015-11-15

    When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1 Empty Re: When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1

    Post by Derek Mon Dec 21 2015, 22:19

    Perhaps T2D's produce more insulin than T1's inject?
    Re: Dr Kraft eye opening discussion on hyperinsulinemia.

    D.
    graham64
    graham64
    Member


    Status :
    Online
    Offline

    Male Posts : 3730
    Join date : 2014-08-10
    Location : Lancs

    When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1 Empty Re: When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1

    Post by graham64 Mon Dec 21 2015, 22:35

    Derek wrote:Perhaps T2D's produce more insulin than T1's inject?
    Re: Dr Kraft eye opening discussion on hyperinsulinemia.

    D.

    That's a possibility Derek, also wonder what medications the T2 were on, if high doses of insulin that could also be a factor

    Sponsored content


    When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1 Empty Re: When diagnosed young, type 2 diabetes is more lethal than type 1

    Post by Sponsored content


      Current date/time is Sun Nov 17 2024, 05:33