Walking Found To Help Diabetics
Live Healthier
Study Shows Increased
Life Span
Individuals with diabetes
will probably live longer simply by strolling, a new report
in the Archives of Internal Medicine indicates.
An analysis of 2,900
adults who had diabetes for an average of 11 years found that
even two hours of walking weekly reduced the risk of death by
39 percent.
Included in that reduction
was a 34 percent decrease in risk of death from cardiovascular
disease, to which diabetics are particularly prone.
Not
Just Healthier, But Living Longer
"This is the first
study to look at a nationally representative sample of people
with diabetes," says Dr. Edward Gregg, an epidemiologist with
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
who conducted the analysis and prepared the report.
"Other studies have
found that people are less likely to get new diseases if they
walk, but we found that walking will increase the length of
life once people have diabetes," Dr. Gregg says.
This is particularly
important, Dr. Gregg adds, because of the incidence of the disease.
"Diabetes is one of
the most common chronic illnesses; the ratio in people 60 and
older is one out of five or one out of six," he explains. "But
even though the disease increases the risk for death, most people
with diabetes will go on to live for a long time.
"So one of the key
things to do is improve the quality of life, and walking will
increase the length of life once people have diabetes," Dr.
Gregg says.
According to the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
and the American Diabetes Association:
Diabetes affects an
estimated 17 million people in the US (90 to 95 percent have
type 2 diabetes). Of these individuals, 11.1 million have been
diagnosed, but 5.9 million are unaware they have the disease.
For the analysis,
Dr. Gregg and his colleagues at the CDC used
data from the 1990-1991 National Health Interview Survey
(NHIS) to look at the mortality rates for 2,896 diabetics
who had been sick for an average of 11 years. Their average
age was 59. In an eight-year follow up, 671 of the participants
died, 316 of those deaths were heart disease related.
Study
Takes a Close Look at Exercise Patterns
Looking at the health
interviews that were conducted in the early 1990s, including
self-reports of exercise among all the participants, the scientists
found that those diabetics who walked for at least two hours
weekly had a 39 percent lower death rate from all causes and
a 34 percent lower death rate from heart disease compared to
those who did not walk.
Among those who walked
between three and four hours a week, the benefit was even higher,
with a 53 percent lower death rate from cardiovascular disease.
Walking any longer than that did not result in further benefit,
however, the study points out.
Dr. Frank Hu, a diabetes
specialist at the Harvard School of Public Health who wrote
an editorial that accompanied the study, says the CDC
study confirms that walking is an important part of treating
diabetes.
"Lifestyle modifications
remain a cornerstone for diabetic management," Dr. Hu says.
"We have very strong evidence that walking and other types of
activity can go a long way in reducing mortality and cardiovascular
complications from diabetes. Walking is as effective as medicines
- probably more effective, because walking has no side effects."
Always consult your
physician for more information.
Treatment
for Diabetes
Specific treatment
for diabetes will be determined by your physician based on:
-
your age, overall health, and medical
history
-
type of diabetes
-
extent of the disease
-
your tolerance for specific medications,
procedures, or therapies
-
expectations for the course of the
disease
-
your opinion or preference
Treatment may include:
type 1 diabetes
Persons with type 1 diabetes no longer produce insulin, and
they must have insulin injections to use the glucose they obtain
from eating.
Persons with type 1 diabetes must give themselves insulin every
day. Insulin can either be injected, which involves the use
of a needle and syringe, or it can be given by an external or
internal insulin pump, insulin pen, jet injector, or insulin
patch. Extra amounts of insulin may be taken before meals, depending
on the blood glucose level and food to be eaten.
Insulin cannot be
taken as a pill. Because it is a protein, it would be broken
down during digestion just like the protein in food. It must
be injected into the fat under the skin for insulin to get into
the blood. The amount of insulin needed depends on height, weight,
age, food intake, and activity level. Insulin doses must be
balanced with meal times and activities, and dosage levels can
be affected by illness, stress, or unexpected events.
type 2 diabetes
Although persons with type 2 diabetes may continue to produce
adequate insulin for some time, their bodies can become incapable
of using it. This syndrome is know as insulin resistance, and
may indicate the need for oral medications that can help stimulate
the pancreas to release insulin or optimize the body's ability
to use the insulin secreted.
Diet and exercise can often bring blood glucose levels down
to normal. When these measures are no longer enough, the next
step is the addition of medications that lower blood glucose
levels.
There are many considerations
a person with diabetes must take in order to properly manage
his/her condition.
Always consult your
physician for more information.
|
August 2003
Walking
Found To Help Diabetics Live Healthier
Not
Just Healthier, But Living Longer
Study
Takes a Close Look at Exercise Patterns
Treatment
for Diabetes
Statins
Slash Heart Disease Risk for Diabetics
Online
Resources
Statins
Slash Heart Disease Risk for Diabetics
Supporting statins'
growing status as the aspirin of the 21st century, a new study
shows this medication can slash the risk of strokes, heart attacks,
and other cardiovascular problems in diabetics - even if they
do not have high cholesterol.
The study, reported
in the medical journal The Lancet, found giving
these cholesterol-lowering drugs to people with diabetes cut
their risk of heart and vessel trouble by about 25 percent.
The benefits of lowering
cholesterol were strong for both those with the blood sugar
disease but no warning signs of cardiovascular illness and those
whose "bad" cholesterol fell in the accepted normal range.
That is not surprising,
the researchers say, because very few people in industrialized
countries have "normal" cholesterol.
"We've all got levels
that are too high, and this study demonstrates that absolutely
unequivocally," says research leader Dr. Rory Collins, of the
University of Oxford, England.
An estimated 100 million
people worldwide have diabetes, putting them at increased risk
for heart attacks and strokes.
If each of them were
to take statins routinely, Dr. Collins says, as many as 1 million
of these life-threatening events could be prevented each year.
"The logical conclusion
is to think about statins in the way we think about aspirin,"
Dr. Collins says. "Now we've got unequivocal evidence that in
people at high risk [for heart and vessel disease], by lowering
their cholesterol we will lower their risk, irrespective of
how low their cholesterol is to begin with."
Dr. Collins' group
compared the effects of routine statin use and no therapy in
more than 20,000 Britons. Of those, roughly 6,000 had diabetes
- mostly the adult-onset, or type 2, form of the condition -
while the rest had varying degrees of blocked arteries but no
blood sugar problems.
Half the volunteers
were given 40 milligrams a day of the drug simvastatin, sold
as Zocor® by Merck & Co., which helped fund the
study. Half were given a placebo, or inactive pill.
Over the next five
years, 601 diabetics taking the statin suffered a first-time
heart attack or stroke, or required procedures to correct
vessel blockages. The figure was 748 in the group on placebo
- a difference of 22 percent. For those who had already had
one of these events, the cholesterol drug significantly reduced
their chances of suffering a repeat attack.
In the 2,900 diabetics
without blocked blood vessels at the start of the trial, the
reduction was even greater: 33 percent fewer people in this
group developed heart or vessel problems.
And, among diabetics
with low-density lipoprotein (LDL), the dangerous form of cholesterol,
that was not high, taking the daily statin dropped their risk
of developing cardiovascular trouble by 27 percent compared
with those on placebo.
Dr. Collins says the
benefits of the drug persisted even in diabetics with LDL counts
of 80 milligrams per deciliter of blood, a figure generally
thought to be excellent.
"Our hypothesis was
that irrespective of where you started in terms of your LDL
cholesterol, lowering it by the same absolute amount - an average
of 40 milligrams per deciliter - should reduce the risk of [heart
and vessel problems] by the same proportion," Dr. Collins says.
Always consult your
physician for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization
is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Diabetes Association
American
Heart Association
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Diabetes
Care
Healthier
US.Gov
National
Diabetes Education Program
National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
National
Institute of Diabetes & Digestive & Kidney Diseases
(NIDDKD)
National
Institutes of Health (NIH
|