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Mayo Researchers Look For Explanation Behind High Incidence Of Diabetes Among Asian Indians
The incidence of 
type 2 diabetes is rising, especially in urbanized parts of the world where  
sedentary lifestyles and obesity abound. In addition to weight and 
inactivity, race puts some people at increased risk for developing type 2 
diabetes. The incidence of diabetes is rapidly increasing globally, and 
Asian Indians have the highest prevalence. An estimated 32 million Asian 
Indians have been diagnosed with this condition, and some experts expect 
this number to double over the next 30 years. In a study published in the 
March issue of Diabetes, Mayo researchers examined whether Asian Indians 
have observable differences in the way their cells convert nutrient fuel to 
available energy and whether these differences may increase the risk for 
diabetes.
 
    
"We know that Asian Indians are highly susceptible to this condition,  
and they often acquire the disease at an earlier age and at lower body mass 
index than people of European origin," explains Mayo endocrinologist K. 
Sreekumaran Nair, M.D., Ph.D., the study's lead researcher. "The question 
we asked is whether any metabolic differences between Asian Indians and 
Americans of Northern European origin can explain the higher incidence of 
diabetes in Indians."
 
    
Once known as adult-onset or non-insulin-dependent diabetes, type 2 
diabetes is a chronic condition that affects the way the body utilizes 
sugar (glucose). People with type 2 diabetes don't produce enough insulin 
-- a hormone that regulates the absorption of sugar into cells -- and their 
cells resist the effects of insulin (insulin-resistant). While death rates 
due to heart attack, stroke and even cancer are decreasing, deaths related 
to diabetes are increasing. Type 2 diabetes is the leading cause of 
cardiovascular deaths, kidney failure, blindness, sexual dysfunction and 
many other chronic complications.
 
    
Mayo researchers studied 13 diabetic Indians, 13 nondiabetic Indians, 
and 13 nondiabetic northeast Americans of European descent who were matched 
for gender, age and body mass to Indian study participants. Study 
participants were fed the same diet and underwent tests for insulin 
resistance and muscle biopsy to see whether differences occurred at the 
cellular level among the different study subject groups.
 
    
The study yielded a number of interesting findings. Researchers   
observed that the Indian subjects, irrespective of their diabetic status, 
had a greater degree of insulin resistance than the American subjects of 
Northern European origin, even though the study subjects were not obese, a 
condition commonly associated with insulin resistance. Earlier research has 
established that people with insulin resistance typically have poorly 
functioning muscle mitochondria. Mitochondria are the part of cells 
responsible for converting energy from nutrients to ATP (adenosine 
triphosphate), the chemical form of cellular energy that the body uses for 
almost all functions.
 
    
"Our study showed that the Indian diabetic and nondiabetic subjects 
with insulin resistance actually had mitochondrial function that was higher 
than those observed in the Northern European American subjects," says Dr. 
Nair.
 
    
Dr. Nair hypothesizes that key to understanding this difference may lie  
in an examination of how populations adapt as they become more urbanized. 
Urban societies typically move away from lifestyles that involve a higher 
level of physical activity and diets dominated by low-calorie foods.
 
    
"The higher capacity to produce ATP that the Indian subjects displayed   
may have been an adaptive advantage for the generations that preceded them, 
when energy content of their diet was lower. But today, this trait may be a 
disadvantage given the higher energy content of their current diets," 
explains Dr. Nair.
 
    
Dr. Nair and his team are hopeful that the information gained from this 
study will have a substantial impact on understanding the cause of the 
global epidemic in diabetes.
 
    
"Our findings have potential to help determine the energy requirements 
of different populations and what role this plays in the onset of 
diabetes," says Dr. Nair.
 
    
Other authors of this article are: Maureen Bigelow; Yan Asmann, Ph.D.; 
Lisa Chow; Jill Coenen-Schimke; Katherine Klaus; ZengKui Guo, Ph.D.; 
Raghavakaimal Sreekumar; and Brian Irving, Ph.D.
 
Mayo Clinic
http://www.mayoclinic.com
		
Mayo cercetãtori Uitã-te în spatele explicaþie pentru incidenþa mare de diabet zaharat printre indienii din Asia - Mayo Researchers Look For Explanation Behind High Incidence Of Diabetes Among Asian Indians - articole medicale engleza - startsanatate