Diabetes Prevention
If one or more people in your family have type 1 or type 2 diabetes, you're probably concerned about developing the disease yourself and are likely interested in taking measures to reduce your risk. Although there is no way to prevent type 1 diabetes, there are several proven steps you can take to reduce your risk of type 2 disease.
Type 1 Diabetes Prevention
The fact that researchers have not found a way to prevent type 1 diabetes is not for lack of trying. They've tested everything from low-dose insulin injections and drugs that suppress the immune system to vitamin supplements and lifestyle measures. In general, these approaches have not been found helpful, but a few lifestyle measures have shown a glimmer of promise.
For example, studies suggest that vitamin D deficiency may be a risk factor for type 1 diabetes. If you have a family history of type 1 and you don’t get enough vitamin D in your diet, you may want to take vitamin D supplements. Sensible sun exposure (five to 10 minutes of exposure on the arms and legs, or the hands, arms, and face, two to three times per week) is also recommended as a safe way to increase vitamin D levels without increasing your risk of skin cancer.
As you'll read in the next section, eating less and exercising more can help keep weight under control and thus prevent type 2 diabetes. This same lifestyle approach may help delay the onset of type 1 diabetes. Research shows that type 1 diabetes occurs an average of one to two years earlier in overweight children than normal-weight children, suggesting that the insulin resistance that leads to type 2 diabetes may also accelerate the onset of type 1 disease.
Researchers are also working on ways to halt the loss of insulinproducing beta cells after the onset of type 1 diabetes. One approach under investigation is "blocking antibodies," which are being given intravenously in the hopes of heading off the autoimmune response to save any remaining beta cells.
Physician-developed and -monitored.
Original Date of Publication: 21 Apr 2009
Written by: Christopher D. Saudek, M.D.; Simeon Margolis, M.D., Ph.D.
Last Reviewed: 05 May 2009
Diabetes (Diabetes Mellitus), Diabetes Prevention - Type 1 Diabetes reprinted with permission from
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