Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Video Report: Hope for the Journey -
Diabetes Research at VA
WASHINGTON,Nov.
1,
2010/
-- Group visits, telemedicine, peer
counseling, and Internet-based education and
case management are among the innovative
strategies Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) researchers are studying to increase
access to care and improve the health
outcomes of Veterans and others with
diabetes.
VA researchers are seeking better ways to
prevent and treat diabetes, especially in
special populations including the elderly,
minorities, those with amputations or spinal
cord injuries, and those with kidney or
heart disease.
Diabetes is a serious chronic disease in
which the body cannot produce or properly
use insulin. The disease affects about 16
million Americans, including more than
800,000 Veterans receiving care from VA.
Much of VA's research focuses on controlling
the risk of cardiovascular disease in
patients with type 2 diabetes, which is by
far the most common type.
For example, researchers at the Atlanta VA
Medical Center are working to stave off
progression of the condition before it
reaches a full-blown stage. "I think (this
project has) extended my life," says Veteran
Roger Parton, a participant in this research
study.
In another important area of
diabetes-related study—vision health—VA and
its research partners have demonstrated that
Veterans could be accurately tested for an
eye disease called diabetic retinopathy
using a method not requiring eye dilation.
This new efficient and accurate eye test is
helping reduce the risk of blindness in
Veterans with diabetes throughout VA's
health care system, and the program is now
being expanded to evaluate some other
important causes of vision loss.
In yet another study that changed the face
of diabetes care, researchers at the Miami
VA Medical Center looked at whether glucose
control affected the rate of cardiovascular
disease in those with the disease. This
seven-year trial found little reduction in
the risk of stroke, heart attack, and other
cardiovascular complications, compared with
standard treatment. In light of the results
of this study and others, major health
organizations such as the American Diabetes
Association issued new treatment guidance
for doctors and patients.
Additional recent advances in VA diabetes
research include:
Promising studies on the connection between
insulin resistance—the hallmark of type 2
diabetes—and Alzheimer's disease.
A determination that, in some people,
chromosome 12p is a likely site of genes
associated with high triglycerides (a
condition closely linked to diabetes, as
well as obesity and heart disease).
Studies finding that walking on a treadmill
can prevent and even reverse diabetes in
chronic stroke patients.
This kind of diabetes research is advancing
the type of care we're able to give
Veterans," notesJennifer
Marks,
MD, chief of endocrinology at the Miami VA
Medical Center and the VA Diabetes Trial's
principal investigator. "The care we provide
gets better because of research." For
additional information on diabetes for
Veterans, their families, and providers, go
towww1.va.gov/diabetes.
For more information on how VA research is
improving Veterans' lives, go towww.research.va.gov.