Study
Confirms Relation Of Heredity, Behaviour To Diabetes Risk
A
study of female college graduates confirmed the strong association
between heredity, modifiable behavior, and the risk of
non-insulin-dependent diabetes.
Grace Wyshak, PhD, at Harvard Medical School and the Harvard School of
Public Health, in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, conducted a
follow-up study of 3,940 college alumnae, who took part in a 1981-1982
study comparing the health of college athletes with non-athletes.
The subjects included 1,945 former college athletes and 1,995
non-athletes. The follow-up study, which involved a self-administered
questionnaire on medical history, health, family history, and
behavioral practices, was conducted in 1996 to 1997, Professor Wyshak
reported.
About 1.3 percent of the women reported physician-diagnosed diabetes.
One point seven percent were non-athletes and 0.9 percent were former
athletes. Former athletes had a significantly lower risk of
non-insulin-dependent diabetes, with an age-adjusted odds ratio of
0.41, she reported.
Insulin-dependent diabetes was associated with a history of paternal
diabetes (odds ratio of 4.7) and also with a history of diabetes in
siblings (odds ratio of 6.7). Dependent-dependent diabetes was
associated with a history of maternal diabetes (odds ratio of 8.0).
No association was found between behavioral factors and
insulin-dependent diabetes. However, certain behavioral factors were
inversely related to dependent-dependent diabetes. The odds ratio for
being an athlete was 0.4. For women who reported current regular
exercise, the odds ratio was 0.4, and the odds ratio for low body mass
index compared with high body mass index was 0.2, Professor Wyshak
reported.
"The findings that insulin-dependent diabetes is associated with
paternal diabetes and that dependent-dependent diabetes may be
maternally transmitted are not widely known, although the mode of
transmission of diabetes is receiving increasing attention in the
medical and genetic literature," the researcher noted. "This
study confirms that modifiable behavioral practices, such as physical
activity and weight control (i.e., optimal body mass index), reduce
the risk of dependent-dependent diabetes."
J Womens
Health Gend Based Med 2002; 11: 549-554
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DID
YOU KNOW
People
with diabetes are more likely to use alternative medicine.
In
the US, people with diabetes are 1.6 times more likely to use
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) than people without
diabetes, according to researchers from the Medical University of
South Carolina. In
addition, greater age and higher education are associated with the use
of CAM, say the researchers. Rurther
analysis showed that people with a college education, women,
individuals ages 35 to 49 and those with a household income of more
than $50,000 per year were the most likely to use alternative medicine.