1 / 28

Understanding the Link between Diabetes and Obesity… and What You Can Do About it!

Understanding the Link between Diabetes and Obesity… and What You Can Do About it!. February 16, 2012 - Gainesville, Florida. Kenneth Cusi, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.C.E. Professor of Medicine Chief, Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism Division University of Florida, Gainesville, USA

alima
Download Presentation

Understanding the Link between Diabetes and Obesity… and What You Can Do About it!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding the Link between Diabetes and Obesity… and What You Can Do About it! February 16, 2012 - Gainesville, Florida Kenneth Cusi, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.C.E. Professor of Medicine Chief, Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism Division University of Florida, Gainesville, USA E-mail: Kenneth.Cusi@medicine.ufl.edu

  2. DIABETES • When you eat, your body breaks food down into sugar and sends it into your bloodstream. • Insulin (made in the pancreas) helps get the sugar from the blood into the cells to be used for energy needed for daily life. It’ • Insulin like the key that opens the door for the cells. • Diabetes is when the body does not make enough insulin and/or the insulin it makes does not work well. Too much sugar in the blood usually means that a person has diabetes.

  3. K Cusi. Current Diabetes Reports. 2010 Aug;10(4):306-15

  4. What is Pre-Diabetes? • Pre-diabetes is when a person has too much sugar in their blood, but not quiet high enough to be called diabetes. (100-125 mg/dl). • People with pre-diabetes: • Can make changes to their eating habits to help them lose weight and increase their physical activity to delay or prevent diabetes. • Eating healthy is for everyone, but it is especially important for managing or preventing diabetes.

  5. Risk Factors for Diabetes • You are overweight • You rarely excercise • You are 45 or older • You are Hispanic/Latino • You have high blood pressure (140/90 or higher) • Someone in your family has diabetes • You are a woman who has a history of diabetes during pregnancy or has had a baby weighing more than 9lbs at birth

  6. Hemoglobin A-1-C • The A1C tells you your average blood • glucose levels for the past 2 to 3 months. • Think of it as a blood test that “memorizes” your blood sugar level. • Your A1C target should be less than 7%. • The A1C test provides your health care provider with information on how well your diabetes is under control.

  7. Things to do to better to manage your diabetes • Take your medication as instructed • Monitor my blood glucose more closely and record results for your health care provider • Develop a plan with your health care provider • Develop a healthy meal plan • Be more active and lose weight

  8. GOOD DIABETES CARE • Be physically active everyday • Meal planning, be mindful of what and how much you eat • Take your diabetes medications as prescribed • Check your blood glucose levels. Talk with your healthcare provider about how often you should • Visit your healthcare provider as recommended

  9. Objetive for the “Keep on track” booklet • Create awareness of the importance of getting your A1C, blood pressure and cholesterol checked • Take with you to every doctor’s visit to record progress. • Have a list of emergency contacts

  10. Remember to take care of your diabetes by: • Using a meal plan and being active • Taking your diabetes medications or insulin • Talking to your healthcare provider if your plan isn’t working or not meeting your goals.

  11. Healthy Adipose Tissue Macrophage “activation” Hypertrophic Dysfunctional Adipose Tissue Macrophage cytokines (TNFa, IL-6, CRP, others) Adipose tissue infiltration ? Hypoxia ER stress • Genetic • Early life nutritional insults • Chronic over-feeding Hypertropy JNK Adipose tissue insulin resistance NF-Kb Adipocyte-macrophage cross-talk Necrosis Lipolysis Molecular mechanisms of lipotoxicity Adiponectin Adipokines FFA Lipotoxicity • ER stress • Inflammatory response( JNK, NF-Kb) • Mitochondrial function • Insulin resistance Systemic effects Systemic effects atherosclerosis • b-cell apoptosis • insulin secretion • T2DM • HGP • NAFLD • NASH • insulin-mediated • glucose uptake • Endothelial dysfunction • Pro-atherogenic damage • Cardiac function (CHF?) • Risk of ischemia (?) K Cusi. Current Diabetes Reports. August 2010, 10:306-315

  12. Imaging: • Ultrasound (echogenicity): 65-80% sensitivity for NAFLD Diagnosis NAFLD & NASH • Clinical findings: • Few clinical symptoms (i.e., right upper quadrant discomfort) • Requires a high degree of clinical suspicion • Laboratory: • May be associated with elevated liver aminotransferases (ALT>AST) • May NOT be associated with an elevation in ALT/AST

  13. Abdominal fat: Visceral and subcutaneous Magnetic Resonance Imaging Liver and Muscle fat

  14. * P < 0.001 * Cardiovascular Disease in NAFLD * * * N = 2,392 Targher G. Diabetes Care 2007;30, 1212-1218

  15. ?

  16. NEJM 2006, 355, 2297-2307

  17. Adipose tissue TZD  insulin sensitvity lipid storage ?  FFA and adipocytokines  adiponectin ? Direct effects? ? Mechanism of Action of Thiazolidinediones Muscle Pancreatic b-cells Muscle Liver K Cusi. New pharmacological approaches in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Edit. Serrano Rios & Gutierrez, Elsevier 2009

  18. Effect of Pioglitazonein NASH Before treatment biopsy After treatment biopsy Cusi K. In Expert Review of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, 2009

  19. Adverse Effects of TZDs • Weight gain • Water retention, CHF, CVD? • Bone loss? (females)

  20. Studies of Pioglitazone in Patients with NASH (by Kenneth Cusi, M.D. and team) • University of Florida/Shands - NASH study • Screening for patients with fatty liver • Free state-of-the-art metabolic assessments and advice on long-term management • Done by Dr. Cusi and team • VA Gainesville, FL - NASH study • Patients with T2DM • Vitamin E +/- pioglitazone vs. placebo

  21. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact the American DiabetesAssociation at: 1-800-DIABETES (342-2383) o online at: www.diabetes.org Locally call: 210-829-1765

  22. Take care of your risk factors!

More Related