Pre-diabetes and Heart Disease are Interlinked
Tags: blood sugar levels, blood sugar test, heart disease, metabolic alterations, pre-diabetes, stroke, sugar beverage
A new research has found pre-diabetes, the state in which blood sugar levels have become abnormal intermittently, having connections with numerous metabolic alterations which lead towards heart problems.
It was formerly known that pre-diabetes has links with the risks to develop heart disease or expose to a stroke but the changes, which occurred metabolically, were not obvious.
During the study the researchers has observed that the subjects with pre-diabetes were found with greater levels of inflammation within the whole body designated by specific proteins in the blood along with high levels of bad cholesterol (LDL) as compared to health subjects.
Heart disease and stroke risk have found to be linked with high blood sugar levels, abnormal cholesterol levels of LDL and inflammation.
The researchers took on 58 subjects and made them to drink a standard sugar beverage. out of these twenty-eight were diagnosed with pre-diabetes and rest of the thirty were found normal.
Older adults are commonly found with pre-diabetes in which high blood sugar levels are shown up when are tested with a specific sugar-containing drink. The people having the condition usually develop diabetes later on in which blood sugar levels show abnormality all the time.
Now the researchers intend to find out the blood sugar test of older adults will be helpful to identify the people with pre-diabetes and also whether the risk of heart disease and stroke can be reduced by minimizing the high sugar levels or not.


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