|
|
||
![]() |
|
|
|
|
Rewarding for you and us Defeat Diabetes Foundation Defeat Diabetes
Foundation 150 153rd Ave, Suite 300 Madeira Beach, FL 33708 |
Risk of Stroke is High Within 5 Yrs. of Treatment of DiabetesPosted: Saturday, July 14, 2007Risk of stroke is high within 5 years of treatment for type 2 diabetes and more than double that for the general population. More Reason to recommend an aspirin a day. Cardiovascular risk factors are suboptimally treated in diabetes, possibly because of the impression that there is a long delay between diagnosis and the development of macrovascular complications such as stroke. The researchers from Canada determined the incidence of stroke in people newly treated for type 2 diabetes. They conducted an inception cohort study with the use of linked administrative databases from Saskatchewan Health. Subjects entered the type 2 diabetes cohort on receipt of their first prescription for an oral antidiabetic drug. They defined incident stroke as any hospital admission with International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, codes 430 to 438 inclusive. Age-standardized incidence rates were compared between the diabetes cohort and the general population. There were 12 272 subjects in the diabetes cohort, the mean age was 64 years, and 55% were male. They found that during a mean 5-year follow-up, 9.1% of the diabetes cohort had a stroke. The age-standardized incidence rate for stroke was 642 per 100 000 person-years in subjects with diabetes, compared with 313 per 100 000 person-years in the general population (rate ratio=2.1). The relative short-term risk for stroke in the diabetes cohort compared with the general population ranged from 1.8 in persons >75 years to 5.6 in the 30 to 44-year category. The researchers concluded: "The risk of stroke is high within 5 years of treatment for type 2 diabetes and more than double the rate for the general population. This further supports the need for aggressive early cardiovascular risk factor management in type 2 diabetes.” These figures are of concern and do not include those not commenced on an oral hypoglycemic. Source: Diabetes In Control: Stroke 2007;38:1739. June 2007. Short-Term Risk for Stroke Is Doubled in Persons With Newly Treated Type 2 Diabetes Compared With Persons Without Diabetes: A Population-Based Cohort Study, Thomas Jeerakathil, MD, Msc, Jeffrey A. Johnson, PhD, Scot H. Simpson, PharmD, MSc and Sumit R. Majumdar, MD, MPH. Correspondence to Dr Thomas Jeerakathil |
Join us on Facebook
Costa Rica Travel Corp. will donate a portion of the proceeds to and is a sponsor of Defeat Diabetes Foundation.
![]() Send your unopened, unexpired test strips to:
|
|
|