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Diabetes

Generation D: Young Adults with Diabetes


Medically Reviewed On: November 05, 2003

By Christine Haran

Until recently, type 2 diabetes and heart disease have affected older adults almost exclusively. But the obesity epidemic in America is now putting younger adults at risk for life-threatening diseases that were once rare in those under age 50. Type 1 diabetes, in which the body does not produce insulin, is traditionally seen in children and adolescents. But over the last decade, type 2 diabetes—formerly known as adult-onset diabetes—has increased by 70 percent in adults aged 30 to 39, reflecting, researchers say, the 70 percent increase in obesity in adults aged 18 to 29. In this form of diabetes the body's use of insulin is somewhat impaired.

A recent American Diabetes Association–funded study has found that type 2 diabetes is more aggressive when it occurs in adults 18 to 44 than when it is acquired in older adults. Complications of diabetes include heart attack and stroke, and the study found that younger adults with diabetes are 14 times more like to have a heart attack and 30 times more likely to have a stroke than other people their age.

In the study, published in the November issue of Diabetes Care, researchers examined the medical records of 7,844 members of a health maintenance organization who had been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and compared them with members who did not have diabetes. Below, lead study author Teresa Hillier, MD, an endocrinologist and investigator at Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research in Portland, Oregon, discusses how diabetes is different in younger adults, and how Americans can put a stop to this dangerous trend.

Why are younger adults getting type 2 diabetes?
The main reason is that up until a decade or so ago, it was pretty rare to see type 2 diabetes in young adults, and that has changed dramatically with the increasing obesity in our population. People have a genetic risk for type 2 diabetes, but obesity essentially brings that out at a younger age.

The metabolic syndrome, a risk factor for diabetes that includes a constellation of factors such as abnormal glucose (sugar) levels, high cholesterol and high blood pressure, are all worsened by obesity.

Being overweight or being inactive affect how your body processes insulin, so modest weight loss or moderate changes in activity level will improve how insulin works.

Did the term "type 2 diabetes" replace "adult-onset diabetes" because it's becoming more common at younger ages?
Yes, exactly. It's been called non-insulin dependent in the past, but that's not true, either, because although people often start out treating their diabetes with diet and pills, they may need to go on an insulin. And then it was called adult-onset to distinguish it from the kind of diabetes that more typically presents in kids.

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