People
With Diabetes Encouraged To Meet Goals
Lifestyle
Change An Important Factor
Fewer than
12 percent of people with diagnosed diabetes meet the recommended
goals for blood glucose, blood pressure, and cholesterol, says
a new report in the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
This
news comes despite research showing that controlling these
conditions dramatically delays or prevents diabetes complications.
“More
diabetes patients are taking medication to control their blood
pressure and cholesterol, but too few are making needed lifestyle
changes such as exercising, lowering dietary fat, and losing
weight to control the risk factors for diabetes complications,”
says Dr. Catherine Cowie of the National Institute of
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK),
one of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The
researchers compared data obtained from a nationally representative
sample of US adults age 20 years and older with diagnosed diabetes
who took part in either the Third National Health and
Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) conducted
from 1988 to 1994 or the NHANES conducted from
1999 to 2000.
Participants
in the later survey, though similar in age and gender, were
heavier, diagnosed with diabetes younger, and more likely to
be using insulin along with oral drugs to treat their diabetes.
Only
37 percent (compared to 44 percent in the earlier NHANES)
were achieving the American Diabetes Association’s
goal for blood glucose control - a hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) blood
test result of less than 7 percent.
About
37 percent of participants in the later survey had HbA1c levels
above 8 percent, ADA’s recommended “take
action” level.
Although
the percentage of people with diagnosed diabetes taking blood
pressure medication has risen in the last decade, only 36 percent
of participants in the most recent NHANES met
ADA’s current blood pressure goal of
less than 130/80 mm Hg, and 40 percent had high blood pressure.
More
participants in the later survey were also receiving medication
to lower high cholesterol, but 52 percent still had total cholesterol
levels above 200 mg/dl.
The
NHANES surveys did not ask participants which
type of diabetes they had. According to the recently updated
National Diabetes Statistics Fact Sheet, 18.2
million people - about 6 percent of the population -
have diabetes.
Type
2 diabetes accounts for up to 95 percent of all diabetes cases.
Most common in adults over age 40, this form of diabetes is
strongly linked to obesity, inactivity, family history of diabetes,
and racial or ethnic background.
Diabetes
is the main cause of kidney failure, limb amputations, and new
onset blindness in adults and is a major cause of heart disease
and stroke.
Many
clinical trials have proven that these complications can be
dramatically reduced with good control of blood glucose, blood
pressure, and cholesterol.
National
campaigns such as the National Diabetes Education Program’s
“Be Smart about your Heart. Control the ABCs of Diabetes”
(HbA1c, Blood Pressure, and Cholesterol) have led to a wider
awareness of the need to control the risk factors for diabetes
complications.
But
more needs to be done, the study’s authors conclude.
“We
must redouble our efforts to empower patients and providers
with information and tools to improve therapy and to provide
incentives for the comprehensive care that has been proven effective
in reducing diabetes complications,” said coauthor Dr.
Judith Fradkin, director of NIDDK’s Diabetes,
Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases Division.
Always
consult your physician for more information.
Preventing
High Blood Pressure
The
American Diabetes Association recommends the
following to help prevent the onset of high blood pressure:
Always
consult your physician for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization
is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Diabetes Association
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
HealthierUS.Gov
National
Diabetes Education Program
National
Institute of Diabetes & Digestive & Kidney Diseases
(NIDDKD)
National
Insitutes of Health (NIH)
|
March 2004
People
With Diabetes Encouraged To Meet Goals
Diabetes
and Blood Pressure
Preventing
High Blood Pressure
Online
Resources
Diabetes and
Blood Pressure
High blood pressure
is twice as likely to strike a person with diabetes than a person
without diabetes.
Left untreated, high
blood pressure can lead to increased risk for heart disease
and stroke.
In fact, a person
with diabetes and high blood pressure is four times as likely
to develop heart disease than someone who does not have either
of the conditions.
About 73 percent of
adults with diabetes have blood pressure greater than or equal
to 130/80 mm Hg or use prescription medications for hypertension.
Blood pressure is
the force of the blood pushing against the artery walls. Each
time the heart beats, it is pumping blood into these arteries
- resulting in the highest blood pressure when the heart contracts
and is pumping the blood.
High blood pressure,
or hypertension, directly increases the risk of coronary heart
disease (heart attack) and stroke (brain attack).
With high blood pressure,
the arteries may have an increased resistance against the flow
of blood, causing the heart to pump harder to circulate the
blood.
Two numbers are used
to measure blood pressure. The higher number, the systolic pressure,
refers to the pressure inside the artery when the heart contracts
and is pumping the blood through the body.
The lower number,
the diastolic pressure, refers to the pressure inside the artery
when the heart is at rest and is filling with blood. Both the
systolic and diastolic pressures are recorded as "mm Hg" (millimeters
of mercury). This recording represents how high the mercury
column is raised by the pressure of your blood.
According to the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), high blood pressure for
adults is defined as:
and
In an update of NHLBI
guidelines for hypertension in 2003, a new blood pressure category
was added called prehypertension:
and
The new NHLBI
guidelines now define normal blood pressure as follows:
and
Often, persons with
high blood pressure do not have noticeable symptoms. If the
blood pressure is greatly elevated, an individual may experience
the following. However, each individual may experience symptoms
differently.
Symptoms may include:
-
headache
-
dizziness
-
blurred vision
The symptoms of high
blood pressure may resemble other medical conditions or problems.
Always consult your
physician for a diagnosis.
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