Sponsored Links

Featured Links

Other Topics
Sponsored Links



Quote of the Day

"Sometime they'll give a war and nobody will come."

Carl Sandburg

FEATURED
HEALTH
PRODUCTS
 
Guide To Healthier Eating And Weight
 
The Ultimate Collection Of Health Ebooks
 
A Healthy Back In Ten Minutes A Day
 
Complete Guide To Healthy Eating
 
Natural Health Remedies To Help Stress
 




 


Google

 
Featured Diabetes Articles

Diabetes and Foot Care
Diabetics are susceptible to skin problems. In fact, diabetes can cause dehydration or dryness. It can further develop into itchy skin and irritations. This is because elevated blood sugar lessens the effectiveness of bacteria-fighting cells. Skin ...

Diabetes Awareness: Wake Up Call
When traveling on out-of-town business, its common to have the hotel front desk give you a wake-up call in the morning. You want to avoid the embarrassment and repercussions of being late for your business appointments. Here is an important wake-up call ...

Diabetes in Children is on the Rise
Diabetes! Why Must So Many Children Suffer? Diabetes, the body's inability to metabolize sugar properly, is something that most people have to just live with for the rest of their lives. You can control it, of course, with proper diet and by taking ...





Leptin: What It Is, And Why It May Be The Most Powerful "Tool" In The Battle Against Diabetes
 
It's well known that obesity and diabetes often go hand-in-hand. Over 60 million Americans are obese, a condition that makes it 20 to 40 times more likely that you'll develop diabetes than someone of a healthy weight, according to the Harvard School of Public Health. Even being overweight (as opposed to obese) increases your risk of type 2 diabetes seven-fold.

Still, while epidemic numbers of Americans--nearly 20 million--have diabetes, it is not known why some obese people develop diabetes, while others never do.

A Hormone Called Leptin

The protein hormone leptin--which comes from the Greek word for "thin," leptos--may hold the key to unlocking some of this mystery. Derived from fat cells, defects in leptin signaling may lead to obesity, overeating and less energy expenditure.

According to metabolic specialist Ron Rosedale, M.D.:

"Leptin is the way that your fat stores speak to your brain to let your brain know how much energy is available and, very importantly, what to do with it. Studies have shown that leptin plays significant, if not primary, roles in heart disease, obesity, diabetes, osteoporosis, autoimmune diseases, reproductive disorders, and perhaps the rate of aging itself."

Further, a study on mice published in Cell Metabolism has revealed that leptin plays a role in regulating blood sugar, which it does via two brain-body pathways:

One that controls appetite and fat storage

One that tells the liver what to do with its glucose reserves

If the first pathway (the one involving appetite and fat storage) is disrupted, obesity is expected, which raises the risk of diabetes. However, the study found that both pathways may have to be disrupted in order for the body to lose control of insulin and blood sugar levels and develop diabetes.

"Taken together, our findings show there's more to the obesity-diabetes link than the classic thinking that if you eat too much sugar, you'll get fat and get diabetes and that if you don't get diabetes, it's only because you're making more insulin to keep up with the sugar," says senior author Martin G. Myers, Jr., M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Michigan Medical School. "There's something else contributing. Now the challenge is to find out what that is."

Leptin's Link to Fat and Diabetes

"If a person is getting too fat, the extra fat produces more leptin, which is supposed to tell an area of the brain in the hypothalamus that there is too much fat stored, more should not be stored, and the excess burned," Rosedale says.

"Therefore, signals are sent to stop being hungry, to stop eating, to stop storing fat and to start burning some extra fat off. More recently, it has been found that leptin not only changes brain chemistry, but can also "rewire" these very important areas of the brain that control hunger and metabolism," he continues.

In fact, it is also possible to become leptin-resistant. How this process occurs is the focus of much research, but Rosedale suggests that leptin-resistance is similar to insulin-resistance in that it occurs after being overexposed to high levels of the hormone. At this point, the body no longer responds to the hormone, much like you no longer notice a bad odor after being exposed to it for a while, Rosedale explained.

Much like high blood sugar levels result in surges in insulin, sugar metabolized in fat cells causes the fat to release surges in leptin. Over time, leptin-resistance may develop.

Can Leptin be Used to Help Lose Weight or Prevent Diabetes?

As it stands, leptin is still a mysterious hormone that researchers are trying to sort out. To put it simply, though, overweight people tend to have very low levels of leptin in their systems (they may have disruptions in leptin signaling or they may be leptin-resistant, for instance). And, studies have found that feeding leptin to overweight mice causes them to lose weight. This effect was not observed in humans, however.

For now, the best way to reduce your chances of diabetes and obesity (and other diseases like heart disease and accelerated aging), according to Rosedale, is to avoid surges in leptin (which can eventually make you leptin-resistant).

Eating the typical American diet, full of refined sugars and other processed foods, is a surefire way to cause surges in leptin. Focusing your diet on simple, mostly unprocessed foods like vegetables is currently the best way to reduce surges in leptin and leptin-resistance, Rosedale says.

So for now there is no magic leptin injection or pill to make you lose weight and prevent diabetes. The good old advice of eating a healthy diet, though, will help to keep your leptin levels normal, which is key to a healthy weight and life.




Diabetes News



Mother Nature Network

Diabetes death rate drops; skin cells become heart cells
USA TODAY
By Kim Painter, USA TODAY Diabetes deaths: There's a rare bit of good news about diabetes. Though case counts in the United States continue to rise, people with the disease are dying at lower rates, says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Diabetes Deaths Dropping in USFox News
US Sees Drop in Deaths Linked to DiabetesPhiladelphia Inquirer
Obesity Study: Teen Diabetes and Heart DiseaseWFAA
Mother Nature Network -Gant Daily -Sacramento Bee
all 547 news articles »

Diabetes Dramatically on the Rise Among Teenagers
Seattle Post Intelligencer (blog)
Nearly a quarter of American children and adolescents is developing type 2 diabetes or has already the disease, according to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), published in the journal Pediatrics.

and more »

New York Times (blog)

Education and Prevention: Creating Public Service Campaigns About Type 2 Diabetes
New York Times (blog)
By JENNIFER CUTRARO and KATHERINE SCHULTEN Karsten Moran for The New York TimesSara Chernov, 21, was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes when she was 16. Teaching ideas based on New York Times content. Overview | In this lesson, students read about a new ...
Adult Onset Diabetes: Does It Need a New Name?Care2.com
Non-Insulin Diabetes Management: Products, Players, Markets and ForecastsSacramento Bee
Dr. Mallika Marshall: Diabetes and BlindnessNECN
North County Times -New Philadelphia Times Reporter
all 18 news articles »

Mother Nature Network

People With Diabetes May Need Earlier Colon Screen
WebMD
By Charlene Laino May 22, 2012 -- Should people with diabetes be screened for colon cancer at younger ages than is usually recommended? That may very well be the case, say researchers who found that people in their 40s with type 2 diabetes are about as ...
Blood Sugar Basics Game Plan Now Available to Help Patients Tackle Type 2 DiabetesMarketWatch (press release)
How special contact lenses can help monitor diabetesMother Nature Network
Blood Sugar Basics Game Plan seeks to help Type 2 diabetics better manage ...Drug Store News

all 17 news articles »

Telegraph.co.uk

Diabetes treatment is a postcode lottery
Telegraph.co.uk
Treatment for diabetic patients is a postcode lottery with a massive variation in quality of care from one region to another, a report has revealed. In some regions, only 6 per cent of sufferers received the recommended levels of care compared to 69 ...
Diabetes care 'has been failing for decade'BBC News
Report reveals shock diabetes deathsgulfnews.com
Diabetes report shockEast Anglian Daily Times
San Francisco Luxury News -The Independent
all 249 news articles »