Your Account

Community

Topics (Upcoming)

More

Stories tagged with: diabetic actuality

1
0
Sleep Apnea Therapy Improves BG Levels in Type 2s.
http://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2008/12/22/6021.html
Submitted by matinadi 10 months, 4 weeks, 1 day, 13 hours ago
A common treatment for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) decreased the average glucose level during sleep of type 2s who were newly diagnosed with OSA. After seven weeks of the therapy, known as continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), the diabetic patients' average BG level fell 20 mg/dl. Join discussion...
1
0
The History of Diabetes.
http://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2008/12/17/715.html
Submitted by matinadi 11 months, 6 days, 9 hours ago
For 2,000 years diabetes has been recognized as a devastating and deadly disease. In the first century A.D. a Greek, Aretaeus, described the destructive nature of the affliction which he named "diabetes" from the Greek word for "siphon." Eugene J. Leopold in his text Aretaeus the Cappodacian describes Aretaeus' diagnosis: "...For fluids do not remain in the body, but use the body only as a channel through which they may flow out. Life lasts only for a time, but not very long. For they urinate with pain and painful is the emaciation. For no essential part of the drink is absorbed by the body while great masses of the flesh are liquefied into urine." Join discussion...
1
0
Testosterone and Diabetes—An Important Link?.
http://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2008/12/15/6018.html
Submitted by matinadi 11 months, 1 week, 4 days, 8 hours ago
Until fairly recently, low testosterone in men (I call it "low T") was treated only in patients with severe and obvious T deficiencies, such as men with congenital hormonal conditions that affected their pituitary gland or those who had lost both testicles to trauma, tumors, or infections. However, as the medical community has learned more about the benefits of T therapy for men with less obvious causes of low T (e.g., improved sexual desire and function, energy, and body composition), there has been concomitant interest in how T relates to other medical conditions, including diabetes. It turns out that the relationship between low T and diabetes is quite involved, although the final chapter on the ultimate nature of the relationship is still to be written. Join discussion...
1
0
Vitamin K Slows Insulin Resistance.
http://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2008/12/08/6008.html
Submitted by matinadi 11 months, 2 weeks, 4 days, 3 hours ago
Older men who are worried about insulin resistance can take heart from a Tufts University study which shows that higher than normal doses of vitamin K slow development of the condition. (Insulin resistance is a condition in which the body increasingly cannot use insulin properly and blood glucose levels rise. It is a major precursor to type 2 diabetes.) Join discussion...
1
0
Vitamin K linked to insulin resistance in older men.
http://www.huliq.com/11/73662/vitamin-k-linked-insulin-resis...
Submitted by matinadi 11 months, 2 weeks, 6 days, 3 hours ago
Vitamin K slowed the development of insulin resistance in elderly men in a study of 355 non-diabetic men and women ages 60 to 80 who completed a three-year clinical trial at the Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University Join discussion...
1
0
JDRF Names Novocell’s Alan J. Lewis, Ph.D., as President and CEO.
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/jdrf-names-novocellr...
Submitted by matinadi 12 months ago
The Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, the leader in setting the agenda for type 1 diabetes research worldwide and the world’s largest charitable funder and advocate of type 1 diabetes research, announced today Alan J. Lewis, Ph.D., has been named President and Chief Executive Officer. Dr. Lewis, who has more than 30 years of experience in biomedical research, comes to JDRF from Novocell, a cell and drug therapy company focused on diabetes, where he is currently President and Chief Executive Officer. He will join JDRF in January. Join discussion...
1
0
Diabetic Women More Likely to Die After Heart Attack.
http://www.diabetes.org/diabetesnewsarticle.jsp?storyId=1894...
Submitted by matinadi 12 months, 1 day, 14 hours ago
Women younger than age 65 with diabetes tend to have worse cardiovascular risk profiles than diabetic men of the same age, leading to higher death rates following a heart attack, research shows. "The female advantage with fewer cardiovascular events than in men at younger ages is attenuated once a woman has the diagnosis of diabetes," Dr. Anna Norhammar and associates report. Join discussion...

Home | Tools | Help & FAQ | About DIABELINK | Contact us

© DIABELINK 2007

Powered by coRank.com