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Bariatric Surgery - Can We Predict Remission of Diabetes?

>> Sunday, January 29, 2017




One of the most important benefits of bariatric surgery (especially gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy) is its ability to improve the control of type 2 diabetes, often to the point where type 2 diabetes actually goes into remission after surgery.  Not everyone with type 2 diabetes who has bariatric surgery will experience remission - about 70-80% of patients having gastric bypass and about 50-60% of patients having sleeve gastrectomy will experience remission.  Ideally, we would be able to predict the likelihood of diabetes remission before the surgery is done, as this is arguably one of the most important potential benefits of bariatric surgery.

A recent study tried to answer this question using a scoring system called the DiaRem Score, which looked at at 4 preoperative variables amongst a group of 407 patients who underwent gastric bypass surgery:
  • age
  • need for insulin 
  • diabetes medication use (points assigned varied by type of medication)
  • hemoglobin A1C (a blood test which is a 3 month report card of diabetes control)

They found that this score, which is based on the above 4 variables, was highly predictive of who went into remission from their type 2 diabetes and who did not.

Other scoring systems and variables have been looked at as well.  Other variables that stands out in the literature are a shorter duration of diabetes, and preoperative serum C peptide level, which is a marker of a person's ability to produce insulin.

It is exciting to know that as we learn more about bariatric surgery, that we can become better at predicting who may benefit from a diabetes standpoint.  However, a word of caution - longer term studies suggest that for people who do enjoy diabetes remission after bariatric surgery, the diabetes recurs in about 50% of these people by 5 years post op.  While there is still certainly a health benefit to being free of diabetes for a number of years, it is important to remember that the diabetes can return and must be screened for regularly and lifelong.


Follow me on twitter! @drsuepedersen

www.drsue.ca © 2017

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Marijuana and Diabetes Risk - Friend or Foe?

>> Sunday, January 22, 2017




In follow up to my blogs about the increased risk of diabetes associated with smoking (read more here), some of my colleagues have asked me to comment on whether there is also an increased risk of diabetes associated with marijuana use.  With the advent of medical marijuana, and the plans to legalize marijuana use in Canada, this is definitely an excellent question.

A question, which it turns out, we have very little data on which to base an answer.

One study examined body fat, insulin sensitivity, and various aspects of beta cell function (the pancreatic cells that make insulin) in 30 cannabis smokers, and compared them to people matched for age, gender, ethnicity, and body mass index. They found that cannabis smokers had a higher percentage of abdominal visceral fat (the fat around the organs that is the metabolically dangerous (diabetes inducing) fat).  Good cholesterol (HDL) was a little lower, and carbohydrate intake a little higher, but otherwise, there was not much difference between groups.

Another study evaluated metabolic parameters in 4657 adults from the American NHANES (National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey), 579 of whom were current marijuana users. They found that current users had a 16% lower fasting insulin level, and had less insulin resistance as well  (17% lower HOMA-IR, for the scientists in the audience), suggesting a lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes. Use of marijuana in this study was associated with smaller waist (a crude way to measure abdominal visceral fat - which contrasts with the findings in the first study above).

Other than these studies, there is very little data on marijuana and its effect on diabetes risk.

At this point, the available data does not suggest that marijuana carries the increased risk of developing diabetes that cigarette smoking does, with one study suggesting that it may even be protective of developing diabetes. However, the data is extremely limited, and further study of the effects of marijuana is much needed.


Follow me on twitter! @drsuepedersen

www.drsue.ca © 2017

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Mediterranean Diet May Slow Brain 'Shrinkage' With Age

>> Saturday, January 7, 2017





The Mediterranean style of eating seems to be rising above most other dietary plans for its health benefits.  Studies have shown that the Mediterranean diet may reduce the risk of cardiovascular events, and may also decrease the risk of breast cancer. A new study shows that the Med diet may also slow age related brain atrophy (natural 'shrinkage' of the brain with aging).

(Pictured above is the brain of a person in their 20s, compared to a person in their 80s, showing the natural atrophy that happens in the brain over time.)

The study, published in the journal Neurology, examined brain volumes and brain cortical thickness in Scottish people age 73, and followed them for three years until age 76.  They assessed eating patterns using questionnaires at age 70 (three years before the start of the study).   They found that people who reported less adherence to a Mediterranean style of eating had a greater reduction in total brain volume from age 73 to age 76, than those who reported eating in the Mediterranean style.

While this study is of lower quality than the randomized controlled clinical trial showing the cardiovascular and breast cancer benefit, it is another arrow pointing towards the benefits of the Mediterranean style of eating.   While no diet has been shown to be superior to another for weight loss, the health benefits of the Mediterranean diet continue to impress.


Follow me on twitter! @drsuepedersen

www.drsue.ca © 2017

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