Health News, Wellness, and Medical Information

December 28, 2009

Irregular Heartbeat Risk Higher in Women With Type 2 Diabetes

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Women with type 2 diabetes have a 26 percent increased risk of developing atrial fibrillation, a potentially life-threatening irregular heartbeat, new findings suggest.

The overall incidence of atrial fibrillation was 3.6 percent among people with type 2 diabetes, while the rate for people without the metabolic condition was only 2.5 percent, according to the study, which will be published in the October issue of Diabetes Care.

“We found that people with diabetes have about a 44 percent higher prevalence of atrial fibrillation,” said study author Gregory Nichols, an investigator at Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research in Portland, Ore. “When we stratified the data by sex, the association was still elevated for men — but not statistically significant — but for women, it was still statistically significant.”

The researchers were not able to tease out from the data in this study why women with diabetes might have a higher rate of atrial fibrillation. The authors theorize that diabetes may affect the cardiac autonomic nerves in much the same way the disease damages peripheral nerves and causes a condition known as peripheral neuropathy.

Not everyone is convinced that cardiac neuropathy is to blame, however. “In people with diabetes, the cluster of other cardiac risk factors, like obesity and hypertension, increases the risk of atrial fibrillation,” said Dr. Howard Weintraub, clinical director of the Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at the NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City.

Diabetes is a known risk factor for heart disease. As many as 65 percent of people with diabetes will die from heart disease and stroke, according to the American Diabetes Association. Death rates from heart disease are up to four times higher for people with diabetes when compared to people without diabetes.

The current study culled data from more than 10,000 members of an HMO diabetes registry who had type 2 diabetes, and then matched them by age and sex to more than 7,000 people without diabetes. The study period was January 1999 through December 2008.

Over an average follow-up time of about seven years, people with type 2 diabetes developed 9.1 cases of atrial fibrillation per 1,000 person-years, according to the study. During the same period, there were 6.6 cases (per 1,000 person-years) of atrial fibrillation in people without diabetes.

When the researchers adjusted the data to account for other factors, such as obesity and high blood pressure, they found that the increased risk of atrial fibrillation in people with type 2 diabetes only remained for women.

Nichols said that this information is important for doctors to know because they might not always look for atrial fibrillation in women.

But, he added, in this study, “among women, diabetes was a stronger predictor of atrial fibrillation than obesity and elevated blood pressure.”

Weintraub pointed out that this study didn’t include comparisons of echocardiograms (an imaging test of the heart), which would have allowed researchers to assess heart health at the start of the study, and ensure that no one with preexisting, but undiagnosed, heart disease was included. Additionally, the researchers didn’t look to see if blood sugar control made a difference in the rates of atrial fibrillation.

“Diabetes is a metabolic disorder in which heart disease risk factors cluster,” said Weintraub. He added that one important take-away message from this study is to try to aggressively control your weight and blood pressure levels, particularly if you have diabetes, because it increases your risk of atrial fibrillation and other forms of heart disease.

December 20, 2009

Type 2 Diabetes Drug May Increase Fracture Risk

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Patients who take the diabetes drugs known as thiazolidinediones may be at higher risk of bone fracture, new research suggests.

In the study, Dr. Ian Douglas of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and colleagues searched a database of more than 6 million patients in the United Kingdom and found 1,819 people aged 40 and older who had had a bone fracture and had been prescribed a type of thiazolidinedione. The drugs were introduced in the 1990s and are used to treat type 2 diabetes.

After adjusting their figures to account for the fact that older people are more likely to break bones, the researchers found that those taking thiazolidinediones had almost 1.5 times as many fractures while taking the drugs as they did when they weren’t taking the drugs. The risk grew the longer the people took the medications.

The findings support previous research that has suggested a link between these medications and bone fractures. But the researchers acknowledge that the study didn’t follow the gold standard of research, which is to randomly assign people to take the drug or not take it.

Still, Douglas and colleagues conclude that the findings “should be taken into consideration in the wider debate surrounding the possible risks and benefits of treatment with thiazolidinediones.”

December 13, 2009

Many Kids Suffer Medication Side Effects: Study

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More than half a million kids a year are treated for medication side effects in American outpatient clinics and emergency rooms, according to new data.

Researchers at Children’s Hospital Boston analyzed National Center for Health Statistics outpatient data between 1995 and 2005. Among children up to age 18, there were 585,922 visits a year for adverse drug events (ADEs). Most visits were to outpatient clinics, but 22 percent were to hospital emergency departments.

“We found that there are as many as 13 outpatient visits for adverse drug events per 1,000 children, indicating that they are a common complication of pediatric care,” study leader Dr. Florence Bourgeois, of Children’s division of emergency medicine, said in a news release.

The majority of visits were by children 4 and younger (43 percent), followed by youngsters aged 15 to 18 (23 percent). Skin-related (45 percent) and gastrointestinal (16.5 percent) were the most common types of side effects, and 52 percent of the children had symptoms that suggested an allergic reaction.

Antimicrobials such as penicillin were the most frequently implicated drugs. They were involved in 27.5 percent of all visits and in as many as 40 percent of visits by children under 4.

The two next most frequently implicated drugs were neurologic/psychotropic medications (6.5 percent) and hormones (6 percent). These two categories of drugs accounted for the most visits among older children, which likely reflects their increased use for emotional and behavioral disorders by teens and for birth control among teen girls.

The study findings, published in the October issue of the journal Pediatrics, suggest that doctors need to be aware of the potential adverse effects of medications in children and provide appropriate information to parents, the researchers said.

“One approach to reducing adverse events is to ensure that clinicians have ready access to complete information on the adverse effects and comparative effectiveness of medications. This information should derive from data on the real-world use of the drugs, not just from the package inserts,” Bourgeois said.

December 7, 2009

Women may fare worse after a concussion

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Don’t discount a bump to the noggin that knocks you out during a soccer game: Researchers report poorer than average thinking skills and reaction times in young soccer players, and particularly female players, who had just one concussion.

Concussions – usually marked by a loss of consciousness — may result in memory loss, slower reaction times, poorer thinking skills, and symptoms such as headache, dizziness, trouble balancing, and nausea. There may be as many as four million sports-related concussions per year.

But questions remain on the severity of a first, versus repeated concussions in male and female athletes, mostly because prior studies were a mix of body sizes, contact sports, and helmet use, note Dr. Alexis Chiang Colvin, at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York, New York, and colleagues.

The current study, in The American Journal of Sports Medicine, tested post-concussion memory, reaction times, and symptoms, in U.S. soccer players of similar body size.

Colvin’s team assessed 141 female and 93 male soccer players from 8 to 24 years old, within 2 weeks of their concussion diagnosis.

Overall, the 101 athletes with a history of prior concussion had poorer memory, ability to process visual images, and reaction times than did 133 athletes without a prior concussion.

Still, compared with male soccer players with concussion, females had significantly poorer – meaning slower – overall reaction time and a markedly higher number of symptoms.

Those findings remained true after adjusting for various factors such as age, grade level, and the number of days after the injury.

Colvin and colleagues call for more studies, particularly of the severity of concussion among female athletes.

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