Posts Topics Forums Images
Search videos from message boards Videos Search messages from microblogs Microblogs Search messages from imdb.com Imdb Search messages from yuku.com Yuku Search messages from lefora.com (free forums) Lefora
My account: Login | Sign Up
Loading... 

Thread: Short-Term Spikes May Lead To Diabetes Complications

Started 7 months, 1 week ago by Richard157
The A1c accounts for less than 25% of the variation in risks of diabetes complications. Short-term spikes (such as post meal spikes) may contribute to the development of diabetes complications. Here is the link: Transient high glucose causes persistent epigeneti...[J Exp Med. 2008] - PubMed Result
Site: Diabetes Forum Community - Diabetes Forum Join To Discuss Diabetes Symptoms Treatments Diets and More  Diabetes Forum Community - Diabetes Forum Join To Discuss Diabetes Symptoms Treatments Diets and More - site profile
Forum: Diabetes  Diabetes - forum profile
Total authors: 3 authors
Total thread posts: 3 posts
Thread activity: no new posts during last week
Domain info for: diabetesforum.com

Other posts in this thread:

Terrie replied 7 months, 1 week ago
That is interesting in theory Richard but these are mice. I'd like to see the study results of actual People. That would not be hard to come by. And would this damage be reversable? I didn't notice a time span for the high numbers. Days, weeks, months? The theory is probably correct in Humans also. Everyone would have the damage then, even so slightly.

JEG replied 5 months, 4 weeks ago
[quote=Richard157;4885]The A1c accounts for less than 25% of the variation in risks of diabetes complications. Short-term spikes (such as post meal spikes) may contribute to the development of diabetes complications. Here is the link: quote] I think this study is overstating their findings. Until the full mechanism by which hyperglycemia exerts its vascular damage is known, I dont ...

 

Top contributing authors

Name
Posts
Richard157
1
user's latest post:
Short-Term Spikes May Lead To...
Published (2009-05-20 02:49:00)
The A1c accounts for less than 25% of the variation in risks of diabetes complications. Short-term spikes (such as post meal spikes) may contribute to the development of diabetes complications. Here is the link: Transient high glucose causes persistent epigeneti...[J Exp Med. 2008] - PubMed Result
Terrie
1
user's latest post:
Short-Term Spikes May Lead To...
Published (2009-05-21 07:33:00)
That is interesting in theory Richard but these are mice. I'd like to see the study results of actual People. That would not be hard to come by. And would this damage be reversable? I didn't notice a time span for the high numbers. Days, weeks, months? The theory is probably correct in Humans also. Everyone would have the damage then, even so slightly.
JEG
1
user's latest post:
Short-Term Spikes May Lead To...
Published (2009-07-03 04:15:00)
[quote=Richard157;4885]The A1c accounts for less than 25% of the variation in risks of diabetes complications. Short-term spikes (such as post meal spikes) may contribute to the development of diabetes complications. Here is the link: quote] I think this study is overstating their findings. Until the full mechanism by which hyperglycemia exerts its vascular damage is known, I dont think we can determine what causes the most significant issues.

Related threads on "Diabetes Forum Community - Diabetes Forum Join To Discuss Diabetes Symptoms Treatments Diets and More":

Related threads on other sites:

Thread profile page for "Short-Term Spikes May Lead To Diabetes Complications" on http://www.diabetesforum.com. This report page is a snippet summary view from a single thread "Short-Term Spikes May Lead To Diabetes Complications", located on the Message Board at http://www.diabetesforum.com. This thread profile page shows the thread statistics for: Total Authors, Total Thread Posts, and Thread Activity