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Category Archives: Diabetes
Diabetes Increases Post-Transplant Mortality Risk – Renal and … – Renal and Urology News
Posted: May 2, 2017 at 1:43 pm
Renal and Urology News | Diabetes Increases Post-Transplant Mortality Risk - Renal and ... Renal and Urology News Diabetes in both the donor and recipient of a transplanted kidney was associated with greater risks of death, according to researchers. |
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Crook County offers diabetes prevention program – KTVZ
Posted: May 2, 2017 at 1:43 pm
Diabetes is on the rise in Crook County. According to the most recent County Health Rankings, Crook County has one of the highest diabetes rates in Oregon, and it has been climbing steadily over the last 6 years. This may be due in part to our aging population.
Individuals over the age of 65 are at a higher risk for diabetes, and its precursor, prediabetes. Lack of physical activity is also another major risk factor. 19% of Crook County adults report getting zero leisure time physical activity.
In September, the Crook County Health Department launched a Diabetes Prevention Program called Prevent T2 to help reduce rates of type 2 diabetes. Prevent T2 is a class for people with prediabetes or who have other risk factors for type 2 diabetes. People with prediabetes higher-than-normal blood glucose (sugar) levels are 5 to 15 times more likely to develop type 2 diabetes than those with normal blood glucose levels. In fact, many people with prediabetes can be diagnosed with type 2 diabetes within 5 years.
Prevent T2 is a program developed by the CDC. It is based upon research that showed that people with prediabetes who lost 5 to 7 percent of their body weight (10 to 14 pounds for a 200-pound person) by making modest lifestyle changes reduced their risk of developing type 2 diabetes by 58 percent. For persons over the age of 60 their risk is cut by 71%.
In the program individuals work with a trained lifestyle coach to learn how to eat healthy, add physical activity to their routine, manage stress, stay motivated and solve problems that can get in the way of healthy changes. Prevent T2 groups meet for a year weekly for the first 6 months, then once or twice a month for the second 6 months to maintain healthy lifestyle changes. Participants of the group that started in September have finished the first 6 months and many have reached their weight loss goals.
The most valuable part of this class for me has been knowing that I have accountability to someone and that it is an extended period of time," said Sue Barnhouse, a current class participant. The information presented in the class has been valuable and given me a reason to continue to make changes in my activity and eating habits that really do make a difference in how I feel.
Crook County Health Department will be offering another class starting May 25th. in partnership with St. Charles. This new class will meet Wednesdays from 5:15 6:30pm at the IronHorse Lodge community room 435 NE Wayfinder Dr. Prineville. The class will be led by two trained lifestyle coaches, Kylie Loving the Diabetes Prevention Coordinator for Crook County, and Carlyn Young, a registered dietitian at St. Charles in Prineville. This class free and open to the public. Interested individuals can come to the first class May 25th to learn more and sign up for the program.
Prediabetes is a condition that often goes undiagnosed, but it is estimated that one in three Americans has it. People are more likely to have prediabetes and type 2 diabetes if they:
Are 45 year of age or older;
Are overweight;
Have a family history of type 2 diabetes;
Are physically active fewer than three times per week;or
Have been diagnosed with gestational diabetes during pregnancy or gave birth to a baby weighing more than 9 pounds.
To participate in the Prevent T2 program, a person must be 18 years of age or older, have a clinical diagnosis of pre-diabetes, or have the risk factors listed above.
To find out more about the Crook County Diabetes Prevention Program, contact Kylie Loving at 541-447-3260 ext. 133 or email her at Kloving@h.co.crook.or.us.
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Muscatine Diabetes Walk Project funds support, research – Muscatine Journal
Posted: May 2, 2017 at 1:43 pm
MUSCATINE Kim Seligman has had a busy year.
Her organization, the Muscatine Diabetes Walk Project, rolled out several programs, including a year-long wellness and nutrition diabetes prevention program and two monthly support groups for Type 1 and Type 2 diabetics. With several more programs in the pipeline, including cooking classes and a diabetes prevention program for third graders, Seligman hopes to live up to her mission to support, empower and encourage diabetics in Muscatine County.
On Friday, Seligman will celebrate that progress with the second annual Muscatine Diabetes Walk. Seligman, whose late son was a Type-1 diabetic, has made it her goal to connect people living with diabetes with the resources and support they need.
I know that these programs and outreach activities were needed in the community and it feels good just to see them coming to fruition and being able to support individuals that live with all types of diabetes here in Muscatine County, she said.
The annual walk was one of the first things Seligman did 13 years ago when she decided she wanted to support people living with diabetes. Initially, she partnered with the Watermelon Stampede to raise money for diabetes research. The annual walk evolved from there, but last spring it became the Muscatine Diabetes Walk, with the majority of the funds raised from the walk going to support programs in Muscatine.
Ninety-five percent of this years proceeds, she said, will go toward local programs, with 5 percent going to diabetes research.
I think (diabetics) need to feel that someone cares about them, she said. Living with diabetes 24/7 is not an easy journey and this is one way that we can celebrate all individuals that live with diabetes and let them have a fun event, come and feel loved by the community, supported by the community and just let them know the programs that we have available for them.
At the walk, Seligman will highlight some of her community partners, including Hy-Vee, whose dietician helps with the diabetes support groups, and UnityPoint HealthTrinity Muscatine, whose clinicians assist with the diabetes prevention program.
Seligman said there is still much to be done in Muscatine County.
I definitely want to see our Muscatine diabetes prevention program grow; we definitely want to grow that program, she said. We want to reduce the percentage of individuals that are at risk for pre-diabetes and Type 2 diabetes here in Muscatine County.
As she has thus far, Seligman hopes to collaborate with organizations who offer wellness services and connect people with services already available to them.
There are many good things (in the community) and its just connecting everything together, she said. If thats what our purpose is, I am so excited about that.
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Muscatine Diabetes Walk Project funds support, research - Muscatine Journal
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Griffin to host talk on diabetes, foot health – Connecticut Post – CT Post
Posted: May 1, 2017 at 4:40 am
Photo: Contributed / Contributed
The Diabetes Education & Support Group at Griffin Hospital will host a free presentations on diabetes medication on Tuesday, May 9 at 2:30 p.m. Photo courtesy of Griffin Hospital.
The Diabetes Education & Support Group at Griffin Hospital will host a free presentations on diabetes medication on Tuesday, May 9 at 2:30 p.m. Photo courtesy of Griffin Hospital.
Griffin to host talk on diabetes, foot health
DERBY The Diabetes Education & Support Group at Griffin Hospital will host a free presentations on foot health on Tuesday, May 9 at 2:30 p.m. at the hospital, 130 Division St., Derby.
Podiatrist Dr. Luke Jeffries, of Yale Podiatry Group, will present Foot Care & Prevention of Foot Complications in the hospitals Childbirth Education Classroom A. There is free valet parking.
The Diabetes Education & Support Group meets September through June on the second Tuesday of each month to discuss the management of diabetes, its challenges, and day-to-day dietary concerns. Individuals with diabetes and their caregivers are welcome to attend.
No registration is required. For more information, call Mary Swansiger at 203-732-1137.
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Griffin to host talk on diabetes, foot health - Connecticut Post - CT Post
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Closing the Diabetes Disparities Gap – Huffington Post
Posted: May 1, 2017 at 4:40 am
When it comes to diabetes in the United States, minority populations are hardest hit.
African Americans and Hispanics are almost twice as likely as non-Hispanic whites to be diagnosed with diabetes by a physician, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health and national examination surveys. African American and Hispanic Americans have higher rates of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) caused by diabetes and start ESRD treatment 2.4 and 1.6 times more often, respectively, compared with non-Hispanic whites.
Income, stable and affordable housing, access to healthy food, quality education and a host of other factors influence a person's health status and longevity. These factors, what public health professionals recognize as social determinants of health, contribute to higher rates of diabetes and associated illness in African American and Hispanic American communities.
During National Minority Health Month each April, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health (OMH) leads the nation in raising awareness about these disparities, their causes and the impact they have on minority communities and the nation as a whole.
The theme of this years National Minority Health Month observance Bridging Health Equity Across Communities, emphasizes the collaborative, community-level work being done across the
nation to help achieve health equity. Dannons partnership with WIC and Lenox Hill Hospitals partnership with leading health providers are two examples of collaborative efforts to bridge the health equity gap.
One way Dannon is helping to achieve health in minorities is by working to make healthier food choices readily available to WIC participants. The addition of yogurt to the WIC food packages, which began on April 1, 2015, brings important nutrients to pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers and young children at critical life stages.
Yogurt is especially well suited for the WIC audience. Most yogurts provide three out of the four nutrients of concern -- calcium, potassium and vitamin D -- and eating yogurt regularly is associated with less weight gain over time. Overweight and obesity are two major risk factors for diabetes. Yogurt is also a source of high quality protein, which can help support bone and muscle strength, and most yogurts contain live and active cultures that help with lactose digestion.
Dannon offers a variety of WIC eligible products to meet WIC participants needs and preferences which can be found here.
Lenox Hill Hospital Partnership
The Gerald J. Friedman Diabetes Institute at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York along with a coalition of other leading health care providers, government officials, public- and private-sector companies, and community-based organizations, recently pledge to help build a sustainable path to health and wellness for the thousands of New Yorkers living with diabetes.
The coalitions new program Vida SI, Diabetes NO! (Life YES! Diabetes NO!), is a bilingual, long-term health initiative that will take a comprehensive and systematic look at diabetes among Latinos with the goal of uncovering the root causes, leading to more effective and efficient delivery of prevention, education, testing, and treatment.
Participants of Vida SI, Diabetes NO! (Life YES! Diabetes NO!) have access to bi-lingual diabetes educators, nutritionists, social workers, exercise trainers and other diabetes specialists to help improve the management of their diabetes and help them live longer healthier lives.
You can learn more about Vida SI, Diabetes NO! (Life YES, Diabetes NO!) on social media including Facebook https://www.facebook.com/VidaSIDiabetesNO on https://twitter.com/VSIDNO and on Instagram under user name @vsidno.
Dannons partnership with WIC and Lenox Hills Vida SI, Diabetes NO! (Life YES! Diabetes NO!) program are national and community level partnerships that will help close the diabetes disparities gap in African Americans and Hispanics.
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Diabetes, weight gain can alter your brain, says study – WLWT Cincinnati
Posted: May 1, 2017 at 4:40 am
(CNN)
It's well-known that type 2 diabetes can cause medical complications in certain organs, including the brain. But overweight and obese people with early-stage type 2 diabetes have more severe abnormalities in brain structure and cognition than normal-weight people with type 2 diabetes, according to a new study in Diabetologia, the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes.
Having type 2 diabetes and being overweight, then, can combine to have a greater effect on brain structures.
"There's a general agreement that type 2 diabetes is a risk factor for various types of both structural and functional abnormalities in the brain," said Dr. Donald C. Simonson, a co-author of the study and an endocrinologist specializing in diabetes. "Simple obesity also shows the same type of abnormalities ... in a milder stage. You can see where it's not quite exactly normal but not quite as bad as someone with diabetes.
"So, if you have both, will it be worse than if you have them alone? That's what we looked at in this particular study," said Simonson, who teaches at Harvard's T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Dr. In Kyoon Lyoo, lead author and a professor at the Ewha Brain Institute at Ewha Womens University in Seoul, South Korea, wrote in an email, "As obesity has been known to be associated with metabolic dysfunction, inflammation, and brain changes independently of diabetes, we expected that brain alterations might be more pronounced in overweight/obese participants with type 2 diabetes."
Effects on the brain
Lyoo, Simonson and their colleagues designed a study around 50 overweight or obese people age 30 to 60 who had been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
Fifty normal-weight people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and 50 normal-weight people without diabetes also participated. These additional participants were age and sex matched to the original group. Those diagnosed with diabetes were also matched for disease duration. Standard body mass index ranges defined "overweight" (having a BMI of 25 to 29.9), "obese" (greater than 30) and "normal weight" (18.5 to 25).
The researchers used magnetic resonance imaging to examine each participant's brain structure, including the thickness of the cerebral cortex and white matter connectivity. Gray matter in the brain contains the neuron cell bodies, whereas white matter contains bundles of nerve fibers and its job is to process and send signals along the spinal cord.
The researchers chose to study thickness and connectivity "because these could be sensitive markers of diabetes-related brain changes, and could be reliably quantified by using magnetic resonance imaging," Lyoo explained.
Participants also were tested for memory, psychomotor speed and executive function, since these are known to be affected in people with type 2 diabetes.
The results aligned with the researchers' initial assumptions, Lyoo said.
Clusters of gray matter were significantly thinner in the temporal, prefrontoparietal, motor and occipital cortices in the brains of diabetic participants than in the non-diabetic group, the study found. More thinning of the temporal and motor cortices could be seen in the overweight/obese diabetic group compared with normal-weight diabetics. Separately and collectively, these areas of the brain impact motor control, executive function, body awareness, concentration and other cognitive functions.
"Most of the things we looked at, you could see that there was a progression, and the obese patients with diabetes were worse than the lean patients with diabetes, and they were both worse than the age-matched controls," Simonson said.
In particular, the temporal lobe appears vulnerable to the combined effects of type 2 diabetes and being overweight or obese, the researchers say. The temporal lobe is implicated in language comprehension and long-term memory.
The brain has been the last frontier in the study of complications of diabetes, Simonson said.
Similarities to Alzheimer's disease
"Diabetic retinopathy, eye disease, is reasonably well-understood," he said. "The same is true of kidney disease, amputations -- we understand much better what causes them and how to prevent them.
"But the brain has been the proverbial black box. It's incredibly complicated, and you can't directly study it. You can't go in and take samples," he said. "The last several years, the techniques of MRI got good enough that we could really look carefully at the brain."
Most of the initial work in the very late 1990s was done in Alzheimer's, schizophrenia, depression and other classic psychiatric diseases, but then scientists began to look at other diseases including diabetes, explained Simonson. At this point, researchers around the world began to see connections.
"You can see a person with depression has thinning of the surface of the brain in certain areas, and you go in and do the same study with somebody with diabetes, and they have thinning in the exact same areas," Simonson said. And diabetes may be a predisposing or risk factor for developing Alzheimer's, he said.
"You see the same types of abnormalities in a milder form in the brain in people with diabetes that you see in people with Alzheimer's disease," Simonson said.
According to Dr. William T. Cefalu, chief scientific, medical and mission officer of the American Diabetes Association, the study is consistent with previous research.
"The presence of overweight and obesity have been shown in other studies to be associated with early structural changes in the brain, and may contribute to cognitive issues," said Cefalu, who was not involved in the new study. "The current study implies that obesity/overweight status in individuals with diabetes may also contribute."
That said, longer-term and more definitive studies are needed to evaluate that aspect.
In the end, Simonson said, another question is more important: "What can you do to prevent it? That's the big question."
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Diabetes, weight gain can alter your brain, says study - WLWT Cincinnati
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UMD loses student athlete to diabetes-related complications – SouthCoastToday.com
Posted: May 1, 2017 at 4:40 am
Aimee Chiavaroli achiavaroli@s-t.com
UMASS DARTMOUTH A UMass Dartmouth male student and lacrosse player died Saturday due to complications related to Type 1 Diabetes, according to a news release.
Sean Peters was a Crime and Justice major and four-year member of the mens lacrosse team, according to the universitys athletics website. He was 22 years old and went to UMass Dartmouth from Medway High School.
Our hearts are broken by Seans passing, Interim Chancellor Peyton R. Helm wrote to students, faculty, and staff Saturday. There are no words that can adequately express the profound loss being felt today by his family, friends, teammates, and classmates. All we can do is hold close those who loved Sean and support them in the difficult days ahead.
We are deeply saddened by the loss of Sean, said Amanda Van Voorhis, athletic director, in a statement. Sean was a four-year letter winner for the Corsairs, and was in the midst of the most prolific season of his career. He had just been recognized on Senior Day last Saturday. This is incomprehensible and a tremendous loss for our athletic community. The UMass Dartmouth Athletics family extends our condolences to the Peters family and loved ones.
According to the news release, Peters was the epitome of a Corsair who balanced the challenging demands of being a student and an athlete.
Peters appeared in 49 career games, starting 24 and all 13 of his contests during his senior campaign. This year, he had 23 goals and 14 assists for 37 points. He registered four goals in a game twice this season, including a career-high seven-point performance in UMass Dartmouths 19-5 win over Becker College April 10. In his final game April 22, he tallied two goals and two assists versus Western Connecticut State University in a 14-8 win, according to the university.
"We encourage friends, teammates, and community members who were close to Sean, and there were many, to come together to support each other and his family at this most difficult time, said David Milstone, associate vice chancellor for student affairs, in a statement. We will ask the family if they are amenable to holding a campus memorial. Our counseling staff is available to meet with members of the community as individuals or as groups."
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UMD loses student athlete to diabetes-related complications - SouthCoastToday.com
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Extension offering free diabetes education – WJBC News
Posted: April 29, 2017 at 5:49 pm
The local University of Illinois Extension is giving people a chance to become more educated about diabetes. (WJBC File Photo)
By Cynthia Grau/WJEZ News
EUREKA The local University of Illinois Extension is providing information to get a handle on diabetes.
The Extension is offering I on Diabetes, a four-part series beginning May 1 in Eureka.
Jenna Smith, nutrition and wellness educator and registered dietician for the Extension, explained how the class works.
It is really designed to help you manage diabetes, and if you dont have diabetes, its really a good program to help you think about ways to prevent diabetes, because no one wants that. Its a great program that usually costs money, and this year, it is absolutely free, because we got a grant. So Im super excited about that, Smith said.
To register, call 309-467-3789 or visit go.illinois.edu/lmw.
Cynthia Grau can be reached at cynthia.grau@cumulus.com
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Diabetes, weight gain can alter your brain, says study – WYFF Greenville
Posted: April 29, 2017 at 5:49 pm
(CNN)
It's well-known that type 2 diabetes can cause medical complications in certain organs, including the brain. But overweight and obese people with early-stage type 2 diabetes have more severe abnormalities in brain structure and cognition than normal-weight people with type 2 diabetes, according to a new study in Diabetologia, the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes.
Having type 2 diabetes and being overweight, then, can combine to have a greater effect on brain structures.
"There's a general agreement that type 2 diabetes is a risk factor for various types of both structural and functional abnormalities in the brain," said Dr. Donald C. Simonson, a co-author of the study and an endocrinologist specializing in diabetes. "Simple obesity also shows the same type of abnormalities ... in a milder stage. You can see where it's not quite exactly normal but not quite as bad as someone with diabetes.
"So, if you have both, will it be worse than if you have them alone? That's what we looked at in this particular study," said Simonson, who teaches at Harvard's T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Dr. In Kyoon Lyoo, lead author and a professor at the Ewha Brain Institute at Ewha Womens University in Seoul, South Korea, wrote in an email, "As obesity has been known to be associated with metabolic dysfunction, inflammation, and brain changes independently of diabetes, we expected that brain alterations might be more pronounced in overweight/obese participants with type 2 diabetes."
Effects on the brain
Lyoo, Simonson and their colleagues designed a study around 50 overweight or obese people age 30 to 60 who had been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
Fifty normal-weight people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and 50 normal-weight people without diabetes also participated. These additional participants were age and sex matched to the original group. Those diagnosed with diabetes were also matched for disease duration. Standard body mass index ranges defined "overweight" (having a BMI of 25 to 29.9), "obese" (greater than 30) and "normal weight" (18.5 to 25).
The researchers used magnetic resonance imaging to examine each participant's brain structure, including the thickness of the cerebral cortex and white matter connectivity. Gray matter in the brain contains the neuron cell bodies, whereas white matter contains bundles of nerve fibers and its job is to process and send signals along the spinal cord.
The researchers chose to study thickness and connectivity "because these could be sensitive markers of diabetes-related brain changes, and could be reliably quantified by using magnetic resonance imaging," Lyoo explained.
Participants also were tested for memory, psychomotor speed and executive function, since these are known to be affected in people with type 2 diabetes.
The results aligned with the researchers' initial assumptions, Lyoo said.
Clusters of gray matter were significantly thinner in the temporal, prefrontoparietal, motor and occipital cortices in the brains of diabetic participants than in the non-diabetic group, the study found. More thinning of the temporal and motor cortices could be seen in the overweight/obese diabetic group compared with normal-weight diabetics. Separately and collectively, these areas of the brain impact motor control, executive function, body awareness, concentration and other cognitive functions.
"Most of the things we looked at, you could see that there was a progression, and the obese patients with diabetes were worse than the lean patients with diabetes, and they were both worse than the age-matched controls," Simonson said.
In particular, the temporal lobe appears vulnerable to the combined effects of type 2 diabetes and being overweight or obese, the researchers say. The temporal lobe is implicated in language comprehension and long-term memory.
The brain has been the last frontier in the study of complications of diabetes, Simonson said.
Similarities to Alzheimer's disease
"Diabetic retinopathy, eye disease, is reasonably well-understood," he said. "The same is true of kidney disease, amputations -- we understand much better what causes them and how to prevent them.
"But the brain has been the proverbial black box. It's incredibly complicated, and you can't directly study it. You can't go in and take samples," he said. "The last several years, the techniques of MRI got good enough that we could really look carefully at the brain."
Most of the initial work in the very late 1990s was done in Alzheimer's, schizophrenia, depression and other classic psychiatric diseases, but then scientists began to look at other diseases including diabetes, explained Simonson. At this point, researchers around the world began to see connections.
"You can see a person with depression has thinning of the surface of the brain in certain areas, and you go in and do the same study with somebody with diabetes, and they have thinning in the exact same areas," Simonson said. And diabetes may be a predisposing or risk factor for developing Alzheimer's, he said.
"You see the same types of abnormalities in a milder form in the brain in people with diabetes that you see in people with Alzheimer's disease," Simonson said.
According to Dr. William T. Cefalu, chief scientific, medical and mission officer of the American Diabetes Association, the study is consistent with previous research.
"The presence of overweight and obesity have been shown in other studies to be associated with early structural changes in the brain, and may contribute to cognitive issues," said Cefalu, who was not involved in the new study. "The current study implies that obesity/overweight status in individuals with diabetes may also contribute."
That said, longer-term and more definitive studies are needed to evaluate that aspect.
In the end, Simonson said, another question is more important: "What can you do to prevent it? That's the big question."
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Diabetes, weight gain can alter your brain, says study - WYFF Greenville
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Messy litter box could mean diabetes for indoor cats – Palm Beach Post
Posted: April 29, 2017 at 5:49 pm
Question: My cat is suddenly making a mess in his litter box. It is full of pee spots and really large-sized ones. He used to only pee in one small spot a day; now it is several large spots.
He acts fine and is eating good. He has always been a chunky cat, but I think he has lost a little weight recently.
Answer: I am glad that you are monitoring your kittys litter box so well. It is important to know what is normal for your cat. Most cats only urinate once or twice a day. When the amount in the litter box suddenly increases, it is a good indication that there is a problem. Please monitor his water and food intake as well. He is probably drinking a good bit more water.
Your kitty will need a trip to his veterinarian to check a urine sample and do a thorough physical examination. Many times, blood testing will be necessary to fully diagnose the problem. Things that can cause increased urination are: diabetes, kidney disease, infection, tumor, crystals or stones in the bladder, and thyroid disease. All of these can be serious, if left untreated.
Diabetes is most often seen in indoor cats that are overweight. The sooner they are diagnosed and treated, the better they tend to do. Diabetes occurs when blood sugar levels get too high and the body cannot utilize it. Insulin is needed to help absorb blood sugar and get nutrition to the cells that need it. When too much glucose (sugar) is in the bloodstream, it is flushed out in the urine and takes excess water with it this causes your cat to drink larger amounts of water and urinate at larger volumes. Diabetes in cats can be treated with insulin injections and a special diet high in protein, with little or no carbohydrates.
Cats are true carnivores, so too much carbohydrates in the diet are not tolerated well. Diabetes in cats can be reversed if caught quickly, however, changes must be made to control blood sugar, weight and diet.
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Messy litter box could mean diabetes for indoor cats - Palm Beach Post
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