Diabetes-2
vooral het gevolg van verkeerde levensstijl.*
Uit
een Engelse studie blijkt dat een verkeerde levensstijl, vooral te weinig
bewegen en overgewicht, de kans op diabetes-2 sterk doet vergroten. De W.H.O.
verwacht, als er niets verandert, dat binnen 25 jaar het aantal mensen met deze
ziekte zal verdubbelen.
Adult
Lifestyle Biggest Risk Factor For Diabetes, Study Finds
ADULT
lifestyle has more influence on your chances of developing diabetes than
childhood experience, according to new research whose findings contradict
previously-held beliefs
A
team from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, studied 412 men and women
and found that fatter adults were more likely to have increased insulin
resistance, a risk marker for Type 2 diabetes.
Childhood
factors, such as birth weight and nutrition, were found to have limited impact,
whereas they were previously thought to be significant. The study is published
in the academic journal, Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews.
Diabetes
is a global health problem that is presenting a major medical challenge
worldwide. It increases the risk of ill health and shortens life. In the UK
alone, diabetes has been said to account for nine per cent of the annual NHS
budget – approximately £5.2 billion a year.
There
are two kinds of diabetes – Type 1 and Type 2. All diabetes is characterized
by raised blood sugar (glucose). In Type 1 diabetes there is an absolute lack of
insulin. In Type 2 diabetes, insulin is produced, but the body's tissues are
resistant to its action, leaving too much glucose in the blood.
Type
2 diabetes is strongly related to overweight and lack of physical activity, and
accounts for 90% of all diabetes. It usually occurs in middle to older aged
adults. The World Health Organisation predicts that the number of people with
type 2 diabetes will more than double over the next 25 years.
The
Newcastle University study measured participants' percentage body fat and
waist-hip ratio, along with other lifestyle elements. Men and women with a
higher body fat and higher waist-hip ratio were more likely to demonstrate
increased insulin resistance.
The
data was collected as part of the Thousand Families Study, a Newcastle
University project which has examined the health of children born in Newcastle
in May and June 1947 throughout their lives. The study was funded by the
Wellcome Trust, the Minnie Henderson Trust, the Sir John Knott Trust and the
Special Trustees of the Newcastle Hospitals.
Study
leader Dr Mark Pearce, who is also director of the Thousand Families Study, said
promotion of healthier lifestyles throughout life would be the public health
interventions most likely to reduce insulin resistance in later life.
He
said: "Previous studies have suggested that risk of poor health in later
life is programmed by impaired development in the womb, and that poor growth in
fetal and infant life is associated with impaired insulin secretion and
sensitivity. However, not all of these studies have not had access to complete
data on later life.
"Our
study, which has examined people from birth to adulthood, suggests that the life
you lead as an adult has the biggest influence on your health, in terms of
diabetes risk, in later life.
Dr
Pearce, of Newcastle University's School of Clinical Medical Sciences, added:
"It's never too late to start living a healthy lifestyle – and even
though our study shows that childhood experience had limited impact on insulin
resistance in adulthood, parents still have a role to play in introducing their
children to eating a healthy diet and physical exercise, so they can develop
good habits that will hopefully last throughout adulthood and old age."
Amanda
Vezey, care advisor at Diabetes UK, said, "We already know that lifestyle
factors play a large part in the development of Type 2 diabetes. This study
further emphasises the importance of eating a healthy, balanced diet and taking
part in regular physical activity.
"To
reduce the risks of developing Type 2 diabetes in earlier years, it's essential
to start leading a healthy lifestyle as early as possible."
(Aug. 2005)