Reversing prediabetes linked to fewer heart attacks, strokes
By Michael Merschel, ·¬ÇÑÊÓƵ News
People who reverse their prediabetes may lower the risk of heart attack, stroke and death, a new study suggests.
With prediabetes, a person has blood sugar levels that are higher than normal but lower than the threshold for a diabetes diagnosis. Even so, people with prediabetes are more likely to have a heart attack or stroke, studies have found.
Prediabetes can be reversed, and smaller studies suggest doing so lowers the risk of developing heart disease. But the authors of the new work, published Tuesday in the , said little research has explored whether reversing prediabetes offers protection.
It's an important issue: According to the latest from 2016, a third of U.S. adults had prediabetes. The prevalence rate is slightly higher in parts of China, where researchers from Tangshan People's Hospital in the northern province of Hebei conducted this latest research.
They looked at a group of 14,231 coal company employees, most of them men, taking part in a long-term study. Their blood sugar was checked in 2006, and again in 2008, and they were tracked through 2017.
Between 2006 and 2008, about 45% of the participants reverted from prediabetes to normal blood sugar. About 42% stayed the same, and 13% progressed to diabetes.
After an average follow-up of nearly nine years and adjusting for variables such as body mass index (a measure of body fat) and blood pressure, the researchers found that people who reverted to normal blood sugar from prediabetes had a 38% lower risk of heart attack and a 28% lower risk of ischemic stroke than those who progressed to diabetes. (An , caused by a clot, is the most common type of stroke.)
Their risk of dying from any cause during the follow-up period was 18% lower than those who progressed to diabetes.
This is the first time that reversing prediabetes has been associated with a substantially lower risk for heart attack and stroke, the authors wrote.
Dr. Robert Eckel, immediate past president of medicine and science for the American Diabetes Association and a past president of the ·¬ÇÑÊÓƵ, said it was good to see the cardiovascular benefits of reverting from prediabetes reflected in a study that looked at a large group of people.
Eckel, who is a professor of medicine emeritus at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, also said the study had some inherent limitations. Studies such as this one, he noted, cannot show causation the way a randomized clinical trial can.
Also, he said, the work would need to be replicated elsewhere to determine whether the findings applied to non-Chinese people. Other of people with Type 2 diabetes have found those of Asian ancestry tend to report higher levels of stroke, while Western nations have higher levels of heart attack.
Blood sugar levels were checked only twice, and using a fasting plasma glucose test, which Eckel said was not the best measure of prediabetes for such a study.
Still, he said, the study's take-home message is that "reverting from prediabetes not only keeps you from having diabetes, but also affects cardiovascular disease risk as part of that benefit."
For someone diagnosed with prediabetes, weight loss is key, Eckel said. The recommends weight loss of 5% to 7% and getting to lower the risk for Type 2 diabetes.
"Ultimately," he said, "preventing Type 2 diabetes and reverting to normal glucose tolerance is what we'd like to see if you, in fact, have prediabetes."
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