Healthy Oils for Diabetics Alameda CA

Researchers find that those with elevated levels of triglycerides were much more likely to have a worsening of symptoms over the course of a year. Other factors--like a higher blood glucose or higher levels of other fats in the blood--did not appear to be significant. The research appeared online in the journal Diabetes.

Norman Katsumi Takaki, MD
510-522-6544
2111 Whitehall Pl Ste A
Alameda, CA
Joan Chiamei Lo, MD
510-891-3682
2000 Broadway Fl 2
Oakland, CA
Philip Robert Madvig, MD
510-987-4373
1950 Franklin St
Oakland, CA
David Louis Estrich, MD
510-839-5640
350 30th St Ste 311
Oakland, CA
Susan Conrad, MD
510-428-3654
747 Fifty Second St
Oakland, CA
Jay Tepperman, MD
315-682-7237
1850 Alice St Lake Park Apt 511-13
Oakland, CA
Alix Jacques Magloire, MD
510-267-7896
2221 Martin Luther King Jr Way
Oakland, CA
Anna B Shurter
(510) 465-6700
350 30th St
Oakland, CA
Grace S Eng
(510) 465-6700
350 30th St
Oakland, CA
Soffia G Jonasdottir, MD
747 52nd St
Oakland, CA
Data Provided by:
  

Healthy Oils for Diabetics

There may be good news for diabetics. Doctors can predict which diabetic patients may come down with the nerve condition called neuropathy by measuring their triglycerides, according to new research. Diabetics with elevated triglycerides are much more likely to suffer from the condition, which can cause tingling, pain and numbness in the hands, arms, feet and legs, according to a study from the University of Michigan and Wayne State University. Diabetic neuropathy affects about 60 percent of the 23 million people in the U.S. who have diabetes.

When researchers looked at the data from more than 427 people who had diabetes as well as neuropathy, they found that those with elevated levels of triglycerides were much more likely to have a worsening of symptoms over the course of a year. Other factors--like a higher blood glucose or higher levels of other fats in the blood--did not appear to be significant. The research appeared online in the journal Diabetes.

"In our study, elevated serum triglycerides were the most accurate at predicting nerve fiber loss, compared to all other measures," says Kelli A. Sullivan, Ph.D., co-first author of the study, according to NewsRx Health & Science.

Getting those triglyceride levels down may help patients avoid the disorder. "Aggressive treatment can be very beneficial to patients in terms of their neuropathy," said Eva L. Feldman, MD, senior author of the study, according to NewsRx Health and Science.

There's another reason to work on lowering your triglycerides: high numbers put you at risk for cardiovascular disease...

Click here to read more from Quality Health