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Link Between Diabetes and Heart Attack Identified

by Sheela Philomena on January 2, 2013 at 12:16 PM

Diabetics are almost 50 percent more likely to have a heart attack than the rest of the population, say researchers.


The new report reveals for the first time the scale of complications affecting people with diabetes, who also have a much greater risk of potentially fatal conditions like heart failure, angina and stroke and of needing amputations.

Additionally, it is not only those with type 2 diabetes because type 1 diabetes sufferers, a condition which develops in childhood, are also at a greater risk of heart attack, the Daily Mail reported.

The findings come from the National Diabetes Audit which analysed the care of two million people with diabetes in 2010/11 in England and Wales.

According to the report, 14,476 of those included in the audit had a heart attack during 2010/11, which is 4,694 more than expected.

In 2010/11 - 45,000 people with diabetes suffered heart failure - 17,700 (65 per cent) more than the number expected (27,300).

The report found people with diabetes are at a 40 per cent higher risk of death than the general population, with 65,700 diabetics dying in 2011 - when 47,000 such deaths were expected.

People with diabetes are at a 40 per cent higher risk of death than the general population, with 65,700 diabetics dying in 2011 - when 47,000 such deaths were expected.

The report estimates there were 22,200 excess deaths in England and 1,900 in Wales among people with diabetes.

Around 2.8 million people have diabetes in the UK, while an additional 850,000 people are unaware they have it.

The report included people with type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood and is controlled by insulin injections, and type 2 - which is linked to unhealthy lifestyles and obesity.

Nine out of 10 people with diabetes have type 2 which occurs when the body gradually loses the ability to process blood sugar, leading to high levels which can damage body organs and years of ill-health.

The report estimates there were 22,200 excess deaths in England and 1,900 in Wales among people with diabetes.

Women with diabetes were at a greater relative risk of death than men with diabetes: at 142 per cent for Type 1 and 40 per cent for Type 2 for women, compared to 130 per cent and 33 per cent respectively for men.

Source: ANI

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