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Women with Diabetes Face Greater Risk of Heart Disease
by National Institute of Health

If you are overweight, you are at risk for diabetes. And if you are a woman, you should know that diabetes can affect you differently than a man, particularly your heart.

Diabetes is on the rise, both in men and women, young and old. "There is an epidemic of diabetes in this country," said Barbara V. Howard, Ph.D., President of MedStar Research Institute in Washington, D.C. She was speaking at a recent seminar on women and diabetes sponsored by NIH's Office of Research on Women's Health.

Some 16 million Americans have diabetes, about one-third of whom do not know it. More people than ever before are developing type 2 diabetes, mainly because of obesity and inactivity, the two major risk factors for this type of diabetes. Most women with diabetes have type 2 diabetes, which is more common in older people. Women who develop diabetes during pregnancy, known as gestational diabetes, are at increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes later in life.

Diabetes can lead to blindness, kidney failure, nerve damage that can result in foot or leg amputation, heart disease and stroke. Special attention must be paid to this public health problem, particularly in women, Dr. Howard stressed.

The reason? "Type 2 diabetes is a major risk factor for heart disease in women," she said. Many studies have shown that women with diabetes have more than three times the risk of developing heart disease - the number one killer of all women - than women without diabetes (men with diabetes have a 1.7 higher risk), she said. Even younger women with diabetes have an increased risk of heart disease.

Why do women with diabetes face an increased risk of heart disease? When women develop diabetes, they have more adverse changes that add to heart disease risk, Dr. Howard stated. Their blood pressure rises, HDL (good) cholesterol levels fall, and abdominal fat increases. Similar changes occur in men with diabetes, but not to the same extent as in women.

According to recent statistics, diabetes is increasing among women of all races. Hardest hit are African American, Hispanic, and Native American women. Rates of diabetes are generally higher among American Indians but vary considerably among tribes. Over the age of 55, more than 50 percent of women from some American Indian tribes have diabetes.

Diabetes occurs about equally among men and women, according to NIH's National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). Unlike men, women rarely develop heart disease before age 45. However, women catch up with men after age 65, when diabetes is more prevalent in both sexes.

Although diabetes cannot be cured, it can be controlled. The take-home message, says Dr. Howard, is that doctors need to be more aggressive in treating risk factors for heart disease in women with diabetes. And if you are a woman with diabetes, you should discuss with your doctor what you should do to prevent heart disease and control diabetes.


About the Author

NIH is the nation's medical research agency - making important medical discoveries that improve health and save lives. The National Institutes of Health (NIH), a part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, is the primary Federal agency for conducting and supporting medical research.

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