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Plastic bottles blamed for heart disease and diabetes

Calcutta News.Net
Sunday 7th September, 2008

The primary chemical used to produce hard plastics, such as bottles, can be a potential risk factor for metabolic syndrome.

A University of Cincinnati scientific team has found the key plastics ingredient, Bisphenol A, suppresses a key hormone.

The hormone, Adiponectin, is responsible for regulating insulin sensitivity in the body and puts people at a substantially higher risk for metabolic syndrome.

Metabolic syndrome is a combination of risk factors that include lower responsiveness to insulin and higher blood levels of sugar and lipids.

If left untreated, the disorder can lead to life-threatening health problems such as coronary artery disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes.

For the study, researchers collected fresh fat tissue from Cincinnati patients undergoing several types of breast or abdominal surgery.

It was found that exposing human tissues to BPA levels within the range of common human exposure resulted in suppression of the hormone that protects people from metabolic syndrome.

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Comments on this story

goh peter
11-23-08, 06:55 AM

Plastic bottles blamed for heart disease and diabetes

For your information,
Stem cells breakthrough in treatment of diabetes
http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/index.php/world/12804-stem-cell-breakthrough-in-treatment-of-diabetes-

http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/45401

What is stem cells?
http://www.health-2-wealth.com

Now available in Malaysia. Just launched in Oct 2008.

waltky
06-07-09, 10:40 PM

Type 2 research...

Meds as good as surgery for diabetics with heart disease
7 June`09 - Prompt bypass surgery holds no advantage over intensive drug therapy in many patients with type 2 diabetes when it comes to dying from strokes or heart attacks, new research suggests.

]
Results from a study that explored the best treatment for patients with both type 2 diabetes and stable coronary heart disease were reported Sunday at the American Diabetes Association’s 69th scientific conference in New Orleans. The study, a multicenter trial led by the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, took place at 49 medical centers in six countries over five years. “It’s the first time any randomized clinical trial has shown a reduction in non-fatal heart attack rates in stable patients with diabetes and heart disease," says cardiologist Robert Frye, a professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic and a study chairman.

The study evaluated two surgery approaches as well as a drug-focused approach in 2,368 people with type 2 diabetes and stable coronary artery disease to help determine the best way to reduce deaths and cardiovascular events (heart attacks and stroke). Intensive medical, or drug-based, treatment combined with either prompt bypass surgery or angioplasty (balloons through the arteries) was compared with intensive medical treatment alone.

Survival rates were 88% overall, says Montefiore Medical Center investigator Joel Zonszein. “A 12% mortality rate at five years in this population is wonderful. It shows they do very well when treated well with medication." Cardiovascular-related mortality rates for diabetics are typically in the range of about 22% to 28%, he says. Among participants pre-identified for coronary bypass surgery, the group who received prompt surgery had significantly fewer heart attacks or strokes vs. those who received medical therapy only, Frye says.

“The study reinforces that for people with diabetes and mild heart disease, medical therapy works, and works very well," Zonzsein says, Adherence to a medication plan is key to heart health, says Richard Kahn, chief scientific and medical officer of the ADA. “Faithfully taking meds and keeping blood glucose under control works and is certainly less expensive, less intrusive and less painful than surgical intervention."

[url=http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-06-07-diabetes-heart_N.htm?csp=24&RM_Exclude=Juno:

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