The Link between Rheumatoid Arthritis and Diabetes Port Orange FL

As if rheumatoid arthritis isn't enough of a life changing diagnosis to cope with, now it appears that RA sufferers may be at an increased risk for developing diabetes as well. Although, the connection between rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes is unclear at this point, but research suggests that it's real.

Crews Chiropractic, P.A.
(850) 218-3587
1365 Beville Rd
Daytona Beach, FL
Injury Health Center
(386) 385-8939
701 Beville Road
South Daytona, FL
Doerrfeld Chiropractic
(386) 761-4001
3959 S Nova Rd
Port Orange, FL
Malcolm D Gottlich, MD
(386) 255-4596
1075 Mason Ave
Daytona Beach, FL
Atlantic Animal Hospital
(386) 441-7387
1640 Ocean Shore Blvd
Ormond Beach, FL
Atlantic Animal Hospital South
(386) 761-2220
2841 S Nova Rd
South Daytona, FL
Boon Chew, MD
(386) 254-4212
303 N Clyde Morris Blvd
Daytona Beach, FL
Thomas W Ayres, MD
(904) 239-8500
545 Health Blvd
Daytona Beach, FL
Shadow Lakes Animal Hospital
(386) 673-0333
125 N Nova Rd
Ormond Beach, FL
Gregory J Mercurio MD PA
(386) 427-8008
223 N Causeway
New Smyrna Beach, FL
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The Link between Rheumatoid Arthritis and Diabetes

As if rheumatoid arthritis isn't enough of a life changing diagnosis to cope with, now it appears that RA sufferers may be at an increased risk for developing diabetes as well.

Although, the connection between rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes is unclear at this point, but research suggests that it's real.

"There are tantalizing links between the two diseases," says Harvard Medical School professor of medicine and Brigham and Women's Hospital rheumatologist Dr. Daniel Solomon. "But at this point they are mainly speculative."

Both diabetes and RA are autoimmune conditions in which a person's own immune system goes on the attack against the body itself.

"When you have an autoimmune condition, your antibodies are actually attacking your own body," explains Dr. Susan Spratt, an endocrinologist at Duke University. "And when you have one autoimmune disease, like RA, you're at risk for getting another one such as type 1 diabetes."

Rheumatoid arthritis attacks the body's joints and causes ongoing inflammation. It's theorized that this inflammation may be connected to insulin resistance, which puts people at risk for developing type 2 diabetes, too. People with RA are more likely to have insulin resistance, in which the body does not respond to insulin the way it should.

Inflammation may not be the only culprit. Medications used to treat rheumatoid arthritis may also bump up a patient's risk of diabetes. Steroids such as prednisone can not only cause weight gain but high blood sugar levels as well, according to Dr. S. Sethu Reddy, endocrinologist and author of The Cleveland Clinic Guide to Diabetes...

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