Another Pill to Help Diabetes

We continue to find the results of research that help individuals with diabetes have more medication and other tools to control diabetes and the symptoms that go with it. One new discovery is a new diabetes pill from Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and AstraZeneca PLC did not increase the risk of heart attack or stroke in a US review, boosting shares in New York and London as investors bet the drug will be approved.

The medicine, saxagliptin, meets new guidelines for cardiovascular safety, according to a staff report posted on the Food and Drug Administration’s website. Outside advisers to the FDA will consider the findings when they meet tomorrow to discuss whether the companies should be allowed to sell the drug in the United States under the name Onglyza.

The FDA review of saxagliptin focused primarily on six core studies submitted by Bristol-Myers and AstraZeneca that followed patients for at least one year after the initial three-to-six month study period. It found an overall low rate of major cardiovascular events, according to Monday’s documents. In higher-risk patients, the rates appeared to be similar between patients taking saxagliptin and those getting a placebo or, in one study, the popular diabetes drug metformin, at about 2%.

Drug makers are striving to introduce new treatments for the 24 million Americans with diabetes, as some older therapies pose heart risks and fail to control blood sugar. Bristol-Myers and AstraZeneca need new products to revive sales and replace drugs facing generic competition, and analysts have been worried that safety concerns at the FDA may preclude saxagliptin’s approval.

AstraZeneca agreed in January 2007 to pay Bristol-Myers as much as $1.35 billion for rights to develop and market saxagliptin and another diabetes drug called dapagliflozin. AstraZeneca’s share of annual sales may reach $578 million in 2015 and $893 million by 2018, according to Deutsche Bank AG analyst Brian Bourdot.

An FDA panel will also consider liraglutide, an experimental shot for diabetes made by Novo Nordisk A/S. The agency usually follows the recommendations of its advisers.

Good News about Diabetes Control

The search for medications and treatments for individuals with diabetes continues aggressively and is making strides. There is some good news that just came out regarding the medication Byetta that many individuals with diabetes are using to help control their diabetes, is doing even better than thought.

The experimental long-acting version of Byetta, being developed by Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc (AMLN.O) and Eli Lilly and Co (LLY.N), demonstrated superior blood sugar control and weight loss when compared to two other widely used diabetes medicines in a head-to-head study.

The drug only needs to be taken once a week and in this time when the economy is so difficult, the results of the research about Byetta sent Amylin shares up as much as 19 percent on Tuesday, while shares of Lilly, the much larger drugmaker, were 2 percent higher.

Amylin expects to file for regulatory approval of once weekly Byetta by the end of June. The version of Byetta currently on the market is typically injected twice a day. This would eliminate a lot of injections and control diabetes in most individuals much better than the options they have now.

The 26-week study compared Byetta LAR, also known as exenatide once weekly, with maximum doses of Merck & Co Inc’s (MRK.N) Januvia, known chemically as sitagliptin, and pioglitazone, sold under the brand name Actos by Japan’s Takeda Pharmaceutical Co Ltd (4502.T).

Type 2 diabetes patients taking Byetta LAR experienced a reduction in A1C — a measure of average blood sugar over three months — which wa more than the other medications and these results are significant because they can change the way diabtes is treated and controlled in the near future. In addition, there has been excellent weight loss during the study and researchers feel that the weight loss wil increase over the next trial.

Some quotes and statistics from Reuters.

More Evidence in the Alzheimer’s-Diabetes Link

We have long heard – and written here – that diabetes is pretty overwhelming and insidious and can all but destroy your vision, your kidneys, circulation and more. We’ve even heard about a possible link to Alzheimer’s disease. Doctors have discovered more information regarding the link between Alzheimer’s and diabetes, as well as the possible speeding up of dementia.

Doctors long suspected diabetes damaged blood vessels that supply the brain. It now seems even more serious than thought before, that the damage may start before someone is diagnosed with full-blown diabetes, when the body is beginning to lose its ability to regulate blood sugar.

Alzheimer’s and dementia are both a little different, however, they are both affected by diabetes and it is important to do what is necessary to keep an eye on your diabetes and have your doctor be aware of both.

“Right now, we can’t do much about the Alzheimer’s disease pathology,” those sticky plaques that clog patients’ brains, says Dr. Yaakov Stern, an Alzheimer’s specialist at Columbia University Medical Center. But, “if you could control these vascular conditions, you might slow the course of the disease.”

More than 5 million Americans have Alzheimer’s, and cases already are projected to skyrocket in the next two decades as the population ages. The question is how much the simultaneous obesity-fueled epidemic of Type 2 diabetes may worsen that toll. In addition how will it be possible to treat and help the millions of people that will end up with the disease.

There are about 18 million people with Type 2 diabetes who are considered to have at least two to three
times a nondiabetic’s risk of developing Alzheimer’s. Still, Type 2 diabetes often leads to heart disease and other conditions that kill before Alzheimer’s typically strikes, in the 70s.

If you have diabetes, this is not a sure thing and you may never end up with dementia, stresses Dr. Ralph Nixon of New York University, vice chairman of the Alzheimer’s Association’s scientific advisory council. Dr. Nixion has made it clear that the prime risk factor for dementia are genetics.

“It by no means means that you’re going to develop Alzheimer’s disease, and certainly many people with Alzheimer’s don’t have diabetes,” he said.

The latest research strengthens the link, and scientists are researching diabetes and its relation to Alzheimer’s .
Some of the findings include the fact that brain functioning subtly slows as Type 2 diabetics’ blood-sugar rises, most often a long time before people have any obvious memory problems.

In a major national study, doctors gave a battery of cognitive tests to nearly 3,000 indiiduals with diabetes. For every 1 percentage point increase in their A1C score — an average of glucose control over a few months there were small but meaningful drops in memory, the ability to multitask, and other cognitive tasks. Wake Forest University scientists documented the findings last month in the Journal of Diabetes Care.

At Columbia, Stern is co-directing a a historical, critical and powerful study. Hundreds of aging New York City residents have agreed to regular testing while they were still healthy. They are allowing scientists to determine the very earliest signs of dementia. Stern tracked yearly changes in 156 who developed Alzheimer’s, and found that those who had a history of diabetes and high cholesterol worsened faster. His findings are reported in a special issue of Archives of Neurology dedicated to the Alzheimer’s-Diabetes link.

Type 2 diabetes occurs as a result of insulin resistance, as the body gradually loses sensitivity to this hormone that’s essential for turning blood sugar into energy. There is a similar effect in the brain which helps explain the dementia link, Dr. Suzanne Craft of the Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System concludes in a research review also published in that journal.

There are other factors — such as brain inflammation and cell-damaging oxidative stress — that can play a role, too. More affected is a dysfunction of glucose control that is not obvious and that does not suddenly begin after diabetes is diagnosed, in fact, as some of the other issues we have discussed, this is another issue that is quiet and insidious as it progresses.

If you have diabetes, closely follow your doctor”s advice for controlling it.
Try to lower high cholesterol and blood pressure that can harm the brain”s blood supply.
Eat a healthful diet and get plenty of exercise. See your doctor regularly and keep track of your symptoms.

Some information is quoted from The Associated Press.

Diabetes in UK Growing Faster than in the US

For quite some time Diabetes has been one of the leading causes of severe illness and linked to many deaths throughout the world with the U.S. leading the way until recently when the UK took the lead in the numbers of individuals with diabetes. Most of the rise in diabetes in both countries are attributed to obesity.

Type 1 Diabetes comes on usually during pre-teen and teen years. There is too much glucose in the blood and it can make you ill. Type 2 diabetes usually comes on gradually, often after the age of 35 or 40, however those figures are getting lower and lower. People who are extremely overweight are most likely to get Type 2 Diabetes.

Researchers have found that diabetes is affecting more and more people and more and more are being diagnosed in the UK, the US and other developed countries. Using a large database of medical records, studies were done on nearly 2 million people with diabetes in the UK. The studies showed that in 1996 in the UK, there was nearly 3% of UK citizens with diabetes. By 2005 there was an overall increase of 54%, with type 2 diabetes being up over 66%.

The researchers have also looked at the rise of diabetes in both countries over the past decade. Diabetes has increased in the US approximately 41% and 66% in the UK. The difference in the two countries could be that campaigns and research to deal with diabetes in the US has been going on longer than in the UK, creating an awareness and various programs to help control diabetes sooner in the US.

Regardless, it is important and essential that research continues, programs continue and awareness of how to avoid, treat and control diabetes also continue, no matter where it takes hold anywhere in the world.

Can Chewing Gum Control Diabetes?

Researchers have been looking for ways to treat and control diabetes for years.  Individuals who suffer from diabetes have also been looking for ways to avoid shots and other uncomfortable control measures. 

In addition, insulin taken orally does not always break down in the person’s system, and if it does, it often takes a great deal of time.  Unfortunately, when a person with diabetes takes insulin they don’t have an indefinite amount of time for it to begin working, nor can they afford for it not to be absorbed at all.

Enter the latest remedy for diabetes: insulin chewing gum.  Yes, you heard right.  This might just be the most fun that anyone has taking their medicine.

Robert Doyle, a chemist at Syracuse University in New York State, has performed studies and believes that an insulin chewing gum can break down orally-taken insulin by the digestive system.

Studies in the past have shown that oral insulin pills are broken down and that any enzymes that remain are not easily absorbed into the bloodstream from the gut. Doyle points out that the body has specific mechanisms for protecting and absorbing valuable molecules that would usually be damaged by conditions in the gut.

Doyle believes that the insulin can move all the way into the bloodstream, where it is released to do its work. Tests on rats conducted by his team have shown some promising results, according to New Scientist magazine. Even though the study on rats involved a treatment in liquid form, Doyle and his colleagues are sure that chewing gum would be a better delivery method and would work exceptionally well in humans.

The researchers say that chewing would ensure a plentiful supply of saliva, providing the protein needed for the insulin to make its way into the bloodstream.

If this innovative insulin delivery system works, it would help individuals with diabetes absorb more of the insulin they need and enjoy taking their medicine.

Understanding Childhood Diabetes

Childhood Diabetes is also called Type 1 Diabetes.  A child with Type 1 diabetes needs to take insulin shots to provide for the insulin not being produced by the child’s pancreas.

The food a child eats is broken down by the body into a sugar called glucose.  The sugar is carried through the blood and gives the body energy.  Insulin helps the sugar enter the cells in the body and controls the amount of sugar in the blood.

With diabetes there ends up being too much sugar in the blood because there is not enough insulin being produced to balance out the sugar.  This often causes many heath problems, which if not treated, can end up being fatal.

In childhood diabetes (Type 1 Diabetes), the pancreas cannot create enough insulin because many of the cells in the pancreas are being destroyed. This is sometimes due to the body’s immune system destroying the cells.  Sometimes Type 1 Diabetes occurs due to hereditary factors, as it can be genetic and run in families.

Some of the main symptoms of Type 1 Diabetes are excessive thirst, urinating a lot and losing weight.  Learning about the disease and learning about what type of diet can be helpful and healthy for diabetes is important for families to learn about and understand.  Treatment involves monitoring blood sugar through use of a glucose meter to check the levels and exploring the choices for a good diet and sticking to it.  Keytone tests are also important.  Basically, they test the urine and can tell you if enough insulin is being produced.  Your doctor or pharmacist can tell you how they work and can also prescribe insulin or other medication to control your child’s diabetes.

It is also essential to have continuous treatment and monitoring through your family’s or child’s doctor, not only for the child that is diagnosed with diabetes, but also to have the entire family tested, as well. 

Juvenile, Childhood or Type 1 Diabetes can be managed and controlled in a way that will allow your child to live a normal life, doing the same things that other children do.  One of the best sources of information is the American Diabetes Association.  You can call them at 1-800-342-2383 or visit the on the web at www.diabetes.org.

Controlling Diabetes by the Minutes

Diabetes is usually not controlled by one thing alone, such as diet, but by a combination of things that work together on the body to regulate diabetes and its symptoms.

One of the tools that has always been suggested to combat diabetes is exercise.  Exercise has an effect on blood glucose levels, as well as heart rate, blood pressure and other levels in the body.

Recently in Britain a study determined that blood glucose levels can be kept under control simply by walking for 45 minutes.  Performed by Newcastle University, the study found that walking improved the body’s ability to store sugar and burn fat.  According to the study, after a few weeks of doing this regularly, the effects of diabetes were reduced.  This is especially true for individuals with late onset or type 2 diabetes.

Diabetes has often been linked to sedentary lifestyle, which includes a lack of exercise, and obesity, which is often the result of a sedentary lifestyle combined with poor eating habits.

If diabetes is not treated and brought under control, it progresses and it leads to blood vessel damage, risk of stroke and heart attack, visual problems including blindness, kidney damage and, because of cardiovascular issues, can result in amputation of limbs.

The studies at Newcastle give individuals with diabetes an immediate tool in the arsenal against the symptoms of diabetes without having to add another medication to their regimen.  Even if an individual begins by exercising for just a few minutes every day and builds up to 45 minutes, it will still do some good.

The studies also showed that more active individuals were able to store more sugar in their muscles and they were able to burn more fat.  Since the muscles store most of the sugar in the body, if they are unable to absorb enough sugar, the sugar ends up in the bloodstream keeping the levels too high.  This causes damage to the veins, arteries and many of the organs, leading to long term problems, escalating diabetes symptoms and often leading to blindness, amputation, dialysis or death.

If you or someone you know or love has diabetes, it is important to know that it doesn’t take hours in the gym to try to control it.  It will help to walk for a few minutes a day and work up to 45 minutes every day.  It will improve a person’s health and life, and it very well could save it.