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Rewarding for you and us Defeat Diabetes Foundation Defeat Diabetes
Foundation 150 153rd Ave, Suite 300 Madeira Beach, FL 33708 |
Beta-Blocker Drugs Found To Promote DiabetesPosted: Thursday, October 19, 2006New UK research indicates that taking beta-blocker drugs to treat high blood pressure can increase the risk of developing diabetes by 50 percent, compared to newer drugs. Researchers from Imperial College London studied 14,000 blood pressure patients in the UK, Ireland and Scandanavia. Half the patients were being treated for high blood pressure with the beta-blocker drug Atenolol, along with a diuretic, and half were being treated with a newer calcium channel blocker drug called amlopdipine, along with an ACE inhibitor called perindopril. The researchers found that the group taking the calcium channel blocker and ACE inhibitor experienced a 34 percent lower rate of diabetes than the patients taking beta-blockers. "The result emphatically adds to the evidence that beta blockers and diuretics can exacerbate that risk [of diabetes] ... We have to stop pretending that it's ok to give people diabetes. These cases are absolutely unnecessary," says the study's lead author, Professor Neil Poulter. Though conventional doctors are urging patients to seek newer pharmaceutical treatments for their high blood pressure, natural health advocates say the condition can be treated with simple lifestyle and dietary changes. "None of these drugs are truly safe," says Mike Adams, a consumer health advocate, "and even the ones that don't promote diabetes are dangerous in other ways. Artificially lowering blood pressure by chemically treating the symptom instead of the underlying cause is a sure recipe for disastrous long-term health consequences," he says. "Patients need to lower their blood pressure through dietary changes, exercise and stress reduction, not chemicals that we now know can seriously harm them."
Source: Diabetes In Control: Imperial College London |
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