| Get
a 3-6 Years Head Start
An early warning
system in the making to prevent diabetes
with over 45 million diabetics in the
country, India is called the diabetes capital of the world.
Doctors advise eating healthy and exercising for an hour daily
to keep obesity at baya major risk factor. But that
may or may not work, especially for people in the high-risk
category. What the country needs is an early warning system.
Adam Tabak and other researchers at the
department of epidemiology and public health, University College
London, UK, say it might just be possible to tell if a person
will have diabetes three to six years laterhis blood
sugar levels will be rising fast.
Tabak took help from the Whitehall II
study, initiated in the UK in 1988 (see: A tradition). Under
the study, over 10,000 people underwent a glucose tolerance
test between 1991 and 1994. Blood samples were collected after
a night of fasting and two hours after breakfast.
Right after a meal the blood sugar level is high and insulin
is released to direct sugar to the muscles to be broken down
for energy. Two hours after a meal normal sugar levels are
restored.
Tabaks team repeated the tests on
9,000 participants of the Whitehall II study between 1997
and 1999 and from 2002 to 2004.
In the intervening periods, the people
were made to fill out questionnaires, to know their diabetes
status. When t he results were compared, the team found 505
diabetics. They found that from 13 years to three years before
the final diagnosis, in 2004, there was a gradual increase
in fasting sugar levels for both diabetics and non-diabetics.
But the increase was very high for diabetics, both for fasting
and post-eating sugar levels. Insulin sensitivity also decreased
much faster in diabetics. Fasting sugar levels in diabetics
rose from 98.5 mg/decilitre 13 years before final diagnosis
to 104.2 mg/dl three years earlier to 133.2 mg/dl in 2004.
In case of non-diabetics the increase in fasting sugar was
from 94.68 mg/dl to 95.58 mg/dl during the 13 years of the
study.
Three to six years before one turns
diabetic is the unstable period. The authors of the study
said research is on to identify the symptoms for this period.
Until that can be done regular follow-ups is a must. Indians
have a high insulin resistance. So they become prone to diabetes
(in their 30s) almost 10 years before people in the West,
said Anjana Bhan, endocrinologist at the Max Super-Speciality
Hospital, Delhi. This study tells us that preventive
health check-ups should start earlier in our country, perhaps
when people are in their 20s.
Source: Down
To Earth,
Date:
August, 2009

|