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How Diabetes Increases The Risk Of Heart Disease - Health - Nairaland

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How Diabetes Increases The Risk Of Heart Disease by kvnqfrosh1(m): 3:42pm On Jan 22
Diabetes in Women Can Lead to Earlier Cardiovascular Risk
Diabetes is one of the biggest risk factors for cardiovascular disease in both men and women. According to epidemiological research, those with diabetes have a greater than twice as high risk of developing cardiovascular disease as those without the condition. Premenopausal women are included in this, who are typically at lower risk for cardiovascular disease.

A decade before women, males typically develop heart disease in their 40s and 50s. But for diabetic women, this is typically not the case. The cardiovascular risk starts early for diabetic women. Premenopausal women who have diabetes lose a lot of the protection they would otherwise receive from estrogen.

Heart disease and diabetes in women
Cardiovascular risk is significantly influenced by the level of blood glucose or blood sugar, as well as by how much it adheres to red blood cells and restricts the blood’s ability to carry oxygen. The haemoglobin A1C test is a crucial way to assess blood sugar levels over a three-month period.

One of the proteins that carries oxygen in the blood is haemoglobin. Diabetes is a condition that affects both major and small blood vessels, including the coronary arteries (such as arteries that carry blood to nerve endings and kidneys). Diabetes may have an impact on the cardiovascular system through disturbing the body’s oxygenation by glucosylating blood proteins and attaching glucose to them causing the clumping of proteins that carry cholesterol, such as LDL (bad) cholesterol, which increases the formation of plaque in the vessel walls, producing fatty acids that can eat away at blood vessel proteins, a major contributor to blood vessel inflammation, which has a substantial role in accelerating the onset of atherosclerosis.

Factors at risk for developing diabetes
The precise causation of diabetes is not entirely understood. However, there are a number of risk factors for developing diabetes, some of which are more prevalent in women:

. Family diabetes history
. Obesity or excess weight
. I nadequate exercise
. Being over 45 years old
. Pregnancy weight increase brought on by having a big baby
. Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), a condition that can occasionally be identified by increased insulin levels, affects the ovaries.
. Being an ethnic minority, such as African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans, Native Americans, or Pacific Islanders, where diabetes is more common
.[/b]In addition to abdominal obesity, metabolic syndrome can also involve high blood pressure, high fasting blood sugar, high triglycerides, and low HDL cholesterol (good cholesterol)

[b]Diabetes Symptoms

High blood sugar levels are associated with diabetes symptoms. An oral glucose tolerance test can accurately detect blood sugar levels when symptoms and/or risk factors are present. To ensure proper measurement, this is actually a set of tests conducted over several hours.

The degree of diabetic symptoms can range from mild to severe depending on when it is discovered. Symptoms of high blood sugar include:

.Unaccounted-for weight loss
.Excessive and ongoing hydration or hunger
Often urinating
. Both male and female scrotal yeast infections (vaginal area)
. Distorted vision
. Cardiovascular system and cardiac function-related symptoms can include:
Nerve injury
. Breathlessness and general intolerance to exercise
. Women frequently have unusual heart discomfort, such as jaw, back, and/or neck pain.
. Swelling in the limbs due to fluid buildup in the lungs
. Heart attack

Proper Care for Diabetes
The conditions linked to diabetes must often also be treated. It’s crucial to carefully and regularly control weight, nutrition, and exercise because many diabetics are overweight or obese.

In order to effectively manage diabetes and its accompanying illnesses, open and honest communication between the patient and the primary care physician is crucial. This is due to the sensitivity of discussing weight issues and the variety of ways that people perceive the term “fat.”

Sometimes all that is required to control blood pressure, sugar, insulin, and cholesterol levels is to reduce calorie, fat, salt, and sugar intake and add supervised exercise programmes. In other cases, it can be necessary to introduce any of a wide range of drugs. Everything relies on the patient’s health, the patient’s condition, and the severity of their diabetes.

The Difficulty and Value of Leading a Healthy Life
For persons with limited spare time, packaged food heavy in sugar, calories, and salt is affordable, very accessible, and very alluring. But it’s crucial to make the effort to reduce portion sizes, adhere to a balanced diet, and incorporate physical activity into a daily routine in addition to taking the time to understand your hereditary risks and acknowledge your unique situation.

It’s crucial to be preventive and discuss diabetes and its companion diseases, such as hypertension and cholesterol issue, with a primary-care doctor.

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