"Diabetes and cardiovascular disease" refers to the connection between two health conditions: diabetes, where a person's blood sugar levels are too high, and cardiovascular disease, which involves problems related to the heart and blood vessels. These two conditions often go hand in hand because having diabetes makes a person more likely to develop heart-related issues, such as heart attacks, stroke, or other problems with the heart and blood vessels.
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Meckling KA, O'Sullivan C, Saari D. Comparison of a low - fat diet to a low - carbohydrate diet on weight loss, body composition, and risk factors for
diabetes and cardiovascular disease in free - living, overweight men and women.
Lessening after - meal surges in blood sugar helps protect
against diabetes and cardiovascular disease, most likely by lessening the increase in cholesterol - damaging free radicals that accompanies large elevations in blood sugar.
Using data from the E3N cohort comprising French women recruited from 1990, then aged between 40 and 65 years, they followed 64,223 women from 1993 to 2008, all of whom were free
from diabetes and cardiovascular disease at the time of inclusion in the study.
Due to their high content of monounsaturated fats, avocados have the potential to help with weight management and reduce symptoms of metabolic syndrome, a condition generally defined by a combined risk for type 2
diabetes and cardiovascular disease due to abdominal obesity, hypertension, high cholesterol and high blood sugar.
Collaborative care, a treatment model in which a specialist mental health provider collaborates with primary care, often assisted by a care manager, aims to improve the management of depression, including depression comorbid with medical conditions.1 There is recent evidence from the TEAMcare trial in the USA that integrating depression management and the management of
diabetes and cardiovascular disease achieves better outcomes for both.2
With one third of American adults dealing with serious issues such
as diabetes and cardiovascular disease as the result of being overweight or obese, the increasing popularity of strength training is much more than a positive cultural phenomenon — it's a life - saver in the most literal sense.
That being said, the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines is associated with insulin resistance, obesity and metabolic syndrome, whereas a higher production of anti-inflammatory cytokines has been shown to improve insulin sensitivity (which helps protect the organism from
developing diabetes and cardiovascular diseases), decrease fat storage, enhance muscle regeneration and support longevity.
Otherwise, these symptoms continue into the postpartum period and beyond, eventually resulting in higher risk
for diabetes and cardiovascular disease — the number one killer of women in the U.S. (Stuebe & Rich - Edwards, 2009).
However, Mattson suspects that
with diabetes and cardiovascular disease, fasting may not be as beneficial for people of normal weight as it is for people who are overweight, simply because they are already likely to be in pretty good shape, metabolically speaking.
Dr. Grover and his colleagues used data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (from years 2003 to 2010) to develop a model that estimates the annual risk
of diabetes and cardiovascular disease in adults with different body weights.
Substandard sleep not only has ties to Alzheimer's disease, stroke,
diabetes and cardiovascular disease, but it can also lead to risky decisions and memory problems.
«In addition, as the fat tissue expands, they secrete greater amounts of hormones and pro-inflammatory signals that are responsible for several chronic diseases, including type 2
diabetes and cardiovascular disease.»
«In the general population in the U.S.,
diabetes and cardiovascular disease are associated with low education and incomes,» says Adam Drewnoski, a professor of epidemiology and director of the Center for Public Health Nutrition at the University of Washington.
Consumed in excess, added sugars will cause all sorts of problems like metabolic syndrome, obesity,
diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
On one side of the argument we have public health associations, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and consumer groups looking for effective solutions to address the growth of lifestyle diseases, including obesity,
diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
The Australian Beverages Council, representing 95 % of the non-alcoholic beverages industry, has today rejected and severely criticised claims that artificial sweeteners, like those found in diet soft drinks, can lead to weight gain or increased risk of
diabetes and cardiovascular disease.