Lack of Sleep to Skipping Breakfast: The Less-Known
Factors That Can Give You Diabetes
by
Pat Hagan
Daily Mail
More than a
million people are affected by type 2 diabetes and dont even
know it.
And the risks
they face are high: left untreated, the condition can raise the
risk of heart attacks, blindness and amputation.
Shocking new
figures suggest 24,000 people die every year in England because
of poorly managed diabetes.
Yet if doctors
catch the condition, it can be controlled with diet and medication.
Type 2 is the
most common form of diabetes, accounting for 90 per cent of cases.
Diabetes occurs
when the pancreas does not produce enough insulin the hormone
that converts glucose into energy or the body stops responding
to insulin, triggering high levels of glucose in the blood.
This causes
symptoms such as fatigue, thirst, frequent urination, recurrent
thrush and wounds that are slow to heal.
Most people
associate type 2 diabetes with being overweight, eating junk food
or a couch-potato existence.
Yet research
suggests that modest weight gain, or even relatively minor disruptions
to normal dietary patterns, could be enough to cause it.
So how do you
know if you are at risk? Here, we reveal the less well-known factors
that can increase your chances of developing this serious condition.
HAVING AN
APPLE SHAPED BODY
You dont
have to be obese to be at risk. Just carrying a few extra pounds
around the waistline can be enough to cause the condition. Diabetes
UK says a woman is at risk if her waist reaches 31.5in (80cm).
For a white
or black man its 37in (94cm), and 35in (90cm) for South Asian
men.
This means
people who may appear relatively slim but have a pot belly
or apple shape could be more at risk than someone who looks larger
but deposits fat around their upper body, buttocks or thighs.
This is because
visceral fat, the type of fat that lies around the organs in the
abdomen, is thought to pump out molecules that disrupt the normal
balance of glucose and insulin, and also leads to damaging inflammation
in blood vessels.
BURNING
THE MIDNIGHT OIL
if you regularly
get less than five hours sleep, your risk of getting diabetes
is double that of someone who gets seven to eight hours.
Scientists
at Boston University in the U.S. studied 1,500 volunteers aged over
50, recording their sleep patterns and testing their levels of glucose.
Five hours
or less a night more than doubled the risks, while six hours was
linked with a 60 per cent rise in risk.
Its thought
the danger arises because lack of rest upsets the bodys circadian
rhythm, the internal clock that regulates natural sleep and wake
cycles.
Being
awake when we should be asleep increases the release of the stress
hormone cortisol, which promotes the generation of glucose (to provide
energy to the body to keep it going), says Julian Halcox,
professor of cardiology at Cardiff University.
Read
the rest of the article
February
9, 2012
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© 2012 Daily
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