Feature Channels: Diabetes

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18-Mar-2011 12:05 PM EDT
Trigger Found for Autoimmune Heart Attacks
Joslin Diabetes Center

People with type 1 diabetes, whose insulin-producing cells have been destroyed by the body’s own immune system, are particularly vulnerable to a form of inflammatory heart disease caused by a different autoimmune reaction. Scientists at Joslin Diabetes Center now have revealed the exact target of this other onslaught.

Released: 21-Mar-2011 11:25 AM EDT
A Dose of Safflower Oil Each Day Might Help Keep Heart Disease at Bay
Ohio State University

A daily dose of safflower oil, a common cooking oil, for 16 weeks can improve such health measures as good cholesterol, blood sugar, insulin sensitivity and inflammation in obese postmenopausal women who have Type 2 diabetes, according to new research.

16-Mar-2011 9:00 AM EDT
Taking Diabetes Medication Helps Lower Medical Costs, Slightly
Health Behavior News Service

Diabetes patients who take their medication more consistently have slightly lower health care costs.

Released: 16-Mar-2011 5:40 PM EDT
Americans Are "Sickeningly Sweet"
Loyola Medicine

Americans consume more than 22 teaspoons of sugar daily - half is through sweetened beverages but the new beverage labeling initiative may show consumers how to stop being "sickeningly sweet."

Released: 16-Mar-2011 4:30 PM EDT
International Scientific Summit Will Spotlight the Surgical Treatment of Diabetes and Propose New Directions for Research
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center

On March 28, leading experts across multiple disciplines will convene at the 2nd World Congress on Interventional Therapies for Type 2 Diabetes to review the latest research on bariatric surgery as a treatment option. The three-day meeting, hosted by NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York City, will bring together physicians, scientists and policymakers representing 60 countries. The Congress director is Dr. Francesco Rubino, one of the world's leading authorities on bariatric surgery for diabetes.

Released: 15-Mar-2011 4:35 PM EDT
Insulin-Releasing Switch Discovered
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins researchers believe they have uncovered the molecular switch for the secretion of insulin — the hormone that regulates blood sugar — providing for the first time an explanation of this process.

   
11-Mar-2011 3:10 PM EST
Newer Doesn’t Mean Better When It Comes to Type 2 Diabetes Drugs
Johns Hopkins Medicine

An inexpensive type 2 diabetes drug that has been around for more than 15 years works just as well and has fewer side effects than a half-dozen other, mostly newer and more expensive classes of medication used to control the chronic disease, new Johns Hopkins research suggests.

Released: 14-Mar-2011 5:00 PM EDT
Qatar Foundation and WCMC-Q Host International Symposium on Diabetes, Obesity, and the Metabolic Syndrome in Doha
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center

Scientists, physicians, and other health care practitioners are gathering in Doha to present and share the latest scientific research on the causes and treatment of diabetes, obesity and the metabolic syndrome at the XVII International DALM Symposium hosted by Qatar Foundation and Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar and the Giovanni Lorenzini Medical Foundation in Milan, Italy and Houston, Texas.

Released: 14-Mar-2011 2:30 PM EDT
Antioxidants in Pregnancy Prevent Obesity in Animal Offspring
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

New research may be relevant to how a mother’s diet during pregnancy influences obesity in her children. Rats fed a high-fat prenatal diet had offspring that were obese, an effect prevented by prenatal antixodidants.

Released: 14-Mar-2011 11:15 AM EDT
Does Treating Periodontitis Improve Diabetes Control?
Stony Brook Medicine

The Stony Brook University School of Dental Medicine is leading a multicenter National Institutes of Health-sponsored clinical trial to evaluate whether treatment of chronic periodontitis will help improve diabetes control.

Released: 7-Mar-2011 11:30 AM EST
Physician’s Empathy Directly Associated with Positive Clinical Outcomes in Diabetic Patients
Thomas Jefferson University

It has been thought that the quality of the physician-patient relationship is integral to positive outcomes but until now, data to confirm such beliefs has been hard to find. Through a landmark study, a research team from Jefferson Medical College (JMC) of Thomas Jefferson University has been able to quantify a relationship between physicians’ empathy and their patients’ positive clinical outcomes, suggesting that a physician’s empathy is an important factor associated with clinical competence. The study is available in the March 2011 issue of Academic Medicine.

3-Mar-2011 8:00 AM EST
Researchers Find New Mechanism Behind the Formation and Maintenance of Long-Term Memories
Mount Sinai Health System

Researchers from Mount Sinai School of Medicine have found that lactate, a type of energy fuel in the brain, plays a critical role in the formation of long-term memory. These findings have important implications for common illnesses like Alzheimer’s disease, other neurodegenerative disorders, aging-related memory impairment and diabetes. The research is published in the March 4th issue of the journal Cell.

Released: 2-Mar-2011 4:00 PM EST
New Home Blood Pressure Check Created for Diabetics
University of Massachusetts Amherst

Two-thirds of people with diabetes have high blood pressure. Jenna L. Marquard of the University of Massachusetts Amherst is part of a research team developing a home blood pressure test for diabetics that sends the readings automatically to nurses so their medication can be adjusted as needed.

Released: 2-Mar-2011 12:15 PM EST
Potassium Levels Possible Key to Racial Disparity in Type 2 Diabetes
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Lower potassium levels in the blood may help explain why African-Americans are twice as likely to be diagnosed with type 2 diabetes as whites, according to a new study by Johns Hopkins researchers.

Released: 25-Feb-2011 8:00 AM EST
Spending for Prescriptions to Control Diabetes and Cholesterol Exceed $52 Billion
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)

Insurers and consumers spent $52.2 billion on prescription drugs in 2008 for outpatient treatment of metabolic conditions such as diabetes and elevated cholesterol.

18-Feb-2011 11:20 AM EST
Diabetics Are Not Benefiting From Advances in Kidney Care
American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Despite significant advances in kidney care over the past 20 years, efforts to improve therapy for type 1 diabetes patients with kidney dysfunction remain unsuccessful, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Society Nephrology (JASN). The results suggest that more effective therapies are needed for these patients.

Released: 24-Feb-2011 4:45 PM EST
Missing Sugar Molecule Raises Diabetes Risk in Humans
UC San Diego Health

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego say an evolutionary gene mutation that occurred in human millions of years ago and our subsequent inability to produce a specific kind of sugar molecule appears to make people more vulnerable to developing type 2 diabetes, especially if they’re overweight.

Released: 24-Feb-2011 10:00 AM EST
La Jolla Institute-Led Team Illuminates Molecular Pathway Key to Insulin Resistance in Type 2 Diabetes
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

A research team, led by La Jolla Institute scientist Joel Linden, Ph.D., has shed new light on the problem of insulin resistance, and identified the key participants in a molecular pathway that holds therapeutic promise for reducing the severity of type 2 diabetes.

Released: 24-Feb-2011 7:00 AM EST
Fatty Liver May Herald Impending Type 2 Diabetes
Endocrine Society

A recent study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM) found that individuals with fatty liver were five times more likely to develop type 2 diabetes than those without fatty liver. This higher risk seemed to occur regardless of the patient’s fasting insulin levels, which were used as a marker of insulin resistance.

Released: 24-Feb-2011 7:00 AM EST
Maternal Fructose Intake Impacts Female and Male Fetuses Differently
Endocrine Society

A recent study accepted for publication in Endocrinology, a publication of The Endocrine Society, reports for the first time that maternal fructose intake during pregnancy results in sex-specific changes in fetal and neonatal endocrinology.



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