Medicine Online
Any medical inquiries? Search MOL for answers:
NEWS
Home > News > 2006 > March > 3 > Diabetes May Roll Back Victories Over Heart Disease
Medical References
Diseases & Conditions
Women's Health
Mental Health
Men's Health
Healthy Choice News
Site Map Links
Medical Tips
Attention, chocolate lovers: You may not be able to help yourselves. Swiss and British scientists have linked the widespread love of chocolate to a chemical "signature" that may be programmed into our metabolic systems.
Read more health news

Diabetes May Roll Back Victories Over Heart Disease

FRIDAY, March 3 (HealthDay News) -- Gains in reducing deaths due to heart disease could be wiped out by the ongoing upsurge in diabetes, U.S. researchers report.

"Over the past 30 years, the U.S. has achieved dramatic reductions in illness and deaths from coronary artery disease," study lead author Dr. Jing Fang, formerly of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City and now at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a prepared statement. "But if this upsurge in diabetes-associated deaths and illnesses continues, it may put an end to the progress we''ve made in combating illness and death from coronary artery disease."

Fang''s team analyzed New York City death records for people 35 and older from 1989 to 1991 and from 1999 to 2001. In the decade that elapsed between these two periods, death rates due to stroke, cancer and all other diseases declined. The exception was the diabetes death rate, which increased by 61 percent.

Over that decade, the percentage of heart attacks among people with diabetes increased from 21 percent to 36 percent. The total number of diabetics who had a heart attack more than doubled -- from 2,951 to 6,048. While there was an overall decline among the general population in days spent in a hospital due to heart attack, diabetics showed an increase of 51 percent.

The findings appear in the February issue of the journal Diabetes.

"Diabetes has reached epidemic proportions in the U.S. and the leading cause of death among people with diabetes is coronary heart disease," senior author Dr. Michael Alderman, professor of epidemiology and population health at Einstein, said in a prepared statement.

"We expected to see an increase in hospitalizations due to heart attacks among diabetics, but we were surprised by the magnitude of the increase and the sharply rising trend indicated by these findings," Alderman said.

More information

The American Diabetes Association has more about diabetes.



-- Robert Preidt



SOURCE: Albert Einstein College of Medicine, news release, Feb. 27, 2006

Last Updated: March 3, 2006

HomeSitemap Contact UsAdvertisingPress RoomGive Us Your FeedbackRead Our Terms & Conditions and Our DisclaimerPrivacy Statement