Eating Disorder, Type 1 Diabetes a Dangerous Mix
Despite the importance of nutrition in managing type 1
diabetes, eating disorders and unhealthy weight-control tactics are not
uncommon in young women with the disease -- and the combination can lead to
serious complications, a new study shows.
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Patients with chronic conditions like anorexia nervosa which
require expensive treatments are most likely to have
difficulty getting the care they need under managed care
health plans. Anorexics are obsessed with weight gain and
starve themselves. The condition requires long term medical
and psychological treatment for which many insurers are
refusing to pay.
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UK researchers found that among 87 teenage girls and young women with
type 1 diabetes who were followed over roughly a decade, 15 percent had a
probable
eating disorder, such as
anorexia or
bulimia, at some point during
the study.
In addition, more than one-third reported cutting back on their insulin
in an effort to keep their weight in check, while others said they had
vomited or abused laxatives for weight control.
Instead of fading with age, these problems became more common in young
adulthood compared with adolescence, according to findings published in the
journal Diabetes Care.
The study included girls and young women ages 11 to 25 who were patients
at a UK diabetes clinic in the late 1980s. They were interviewed about their
eating habits, attitudes toward food and eating disorder symptoms at the
start of the study, then again when they were between the ages of 20 and 38.
Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease in which the immune system
mistakenly destroys the pancreatic cells that produce insulin -- a hormone
that helps usher the sugar from foods out of the blood and into body cells
to be used for energy.
People with type 1 diabetes must take daily insulin injections in order
to live. They also have to be careful about what and when they eat to avoid
dangerous blood sugar lows, while also sticking with their insulin regimens
to keep blood sugar levels from soaring. Over time, poor blood sugar control
can lead to complications such as kidney failure, nerve damage, vision
problems and heart disease.
Despite the importance of healthy habits in type 1 diabetes, some
patients are able to disguise the fact that they have an eating disorder,
according to Dr. Robert C. Peveler of the University of Southampton, the
lead author of the new study.
"Surprisingly, some patients do manage it for a time," he told Reuters
Health. "The deterioration in their health may be quite slow and therefore
hard to spot."
Among women in his team's study, those with a
history of eating disorders
were five times more likely than their peers to suffer two or more diabetes
complications -- such as damage to the eye's blood vessels, kidney
dysfunction or nerve damage in the limbs -- over 8 to 12 years of follow-up.
Women who had ever used unhealthy weight-control tactics or misused their
insulin faced a similarly elevated risk of complications.
Overall, six women died during the study period, two of whom had bulimia,
Peveler and his colleagues found.
Poor blood sugar control likely made a large contribution to the
heightened complication risks, Peveler said, but poor nutrition may also
have played a direct role. As an example, he noted that non-diabetic women
with anorexia can develop diabetes-like nerve damage in the extremities.
It's unclear, according to Peveler, whether there is something about type
1 diabetes that makes women with the disease vulnerable to eating disorders.
"We still can't really be sure, but it looks as if there may be a slight
increase in risk," he said.
The fact that insulin injections can promote weight gain may play a role,
as well as the stress of managing a chronic disease, according to Peveler.
But for now, he noted, that is just speculation.
SOURCE: Diabetes Care.
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