Page 1,217«..1020..1,2161,2171,2181,219..1,2301,240..»

Developing next-generation biologic pacemakers with stem cells – Health Europa

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:46 am

University of Houston associate professor of pharmacology Bradley McConnell is helping to develop new cardiac pacemakers by using stem cells found in fat, converting them to heart cells, and reprogramming those to act as biologic pacemaker cells.

The new biologic pacemaker-like cell will be useful as an alternative treatment for conduction system disorders, cardiac repair after a heart attack and to bridge the limitations of the electronic pacemaker.

The work was published in the Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology.

We are reprogramming the cardiac progenitor cell and guiding it to become a conducting cell of the heart to conduct electrical current, said McConnell.

McConnells collaborator, Robert J. Schwartz, Hugh Roy and Lillian Cranz Cullen Distinguished Professor of biology and biochemistry, previously reported work on turning the adipogenic mesenchymal stem cells, that reside in fat cells, into cardiac progenitor cells.

Now those same cardiac progenitor cells are being programmed to keep hearts beating as a sinoatrial node (SAN), part of the electrical cardiac conduction system (CCS).

The SAN is the primary pacemaker of the heart, responsible for generating the electric impulse or beat. Native cardiac pacemaker cells are confined within the SAN, a small structure comprised of just a few thousand specialised pacemaker cells. Failure of the SAN or a block at any point in the CCS results in arrhythmias.

More than 600,000 electronic pacemakers are implanted in patients annually to help control abnormal heart rhythms.

The small mechanical device is placed in the chest or abdomen and uses electrical pulses to prompt the heart to beat normally. In addition to having the device regularly examined by a physician, over time an electronic pacemaker can stop working properly.

McConnell said: Batteries will die. Just look at your smartphone.

This biologic pacemaker is better able to adapt to the body and would not have to be maintained by a physician. It is not a foreign object. It would be able to grow with the body and become much more responsive to what the body is doing.

To convert the cardiac progenitor cells, McConnell infused the cells with a unique cocktail of three transcription factors and a plasma membrane channel protein to reprogram the heart cells in vitro.

In our study, we observed that the SHOX2, HCN2, and TBX5 (SHT5) cocktail of transcription factors and channel protein reprogrammed the cells into pacemaker-like cells. The combination will facilitate the development of cell-based therapies for various cardiac conduction diseases, he reported.

More:
Developing next-generation biologic pacemakers with stem cells - Health Europa

Posted in Stem Cells | Comments Off on Developing next-generation biologic pacemakers with stem cells – Health Europa

Making advanced therapies takes industrializing personalization – STAT

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:46 am

Whats the best way to measure the real rate of progress in personalized cell therapies, gene therapies, and other advanced therapies?

Ive been tracking the ever-growing flow of reports about these therapies in scientific journals and press releases for 15 years, ever since I co-led the passage of Californias $3 billion Stem Cell Research and Cures Act in 2004.

But to truly gauge who will benefit from todays innovations, Ive learned I also need to study the stream of business and technology announcements that runs in parallel. That might seem more mundane but to veterans of advanced therapies, making the science work actually signals success for these gene-, tissue-, and cell-based advanced therapies.

advertisement

The reason is simple. My experience working with advanced therapies has taught me, time and again, that true next-generation medicine requires the industrialization of personalization. That sounds like an oxymoron, but it isnt. To create individualized therapeutics in a sustainable way, we need to deliver even if it seems counterintuitive mass customization.

Breakthroughs such as CAR-T cell therapies are inspiring. They are also unsustainably expensive, difficult to manufacture, and complicated to deliver. We can change this by creating a more focused cross-collaborative production and delivery ecosystem.

The Food and Drug Administration anticipates that it will approve 10 to 20 advanced therapies a year beginning in 2025. It also expects to receive up to 200 clinical trial applications for cell and gene therapies per year, starting now. The more than 1,000 advanced therapy clinical trials now underway worldwide could enroll almost 60,000 patients, according to the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine. That pace wont be possible without new systems and networks that reduce cost, simplify manufacturing, and streamline delivery.

I can see some of these on the horizon when I read the biotech and pharma partnerships reported in BioSpace and BioCentury. Of the 100 most recent, almost 10% were dedicated to cell- and gene-therapy companies and organizations. These partnership announcements are typically viewed as opportunities to highlight new business deals or contract wins. But they are also daily snapshots of the infrastructure of an evolving next-generation health care system forming from within. Here are just a few examples from 2019:

Its encouraging to see biopharma manufacturing, logistics, transport, and other partners in the cell- and gene-therapy ecosystem coming together in new ways to ensure the successful and reliable delivery of advanced therapies for individual patients. But much more evolution is needed to provide sustainable patient access to advanced therapies.

We need even more industry collaboration to overhaul and connect existing health care systems, so production and delivery of cell- and gene-based therapies can be more automated and affordable. According to estimates from credible industry colleagues and leaders, end-to-end automation can shave costs by at least 20% to 30%, and at the same time greatly improve predictability and patient safety.

We must also make this new world simpler for health care providers. Doctors and nurses must not only understand how advanced therapies work medically, but be able to order and deliver them safely with a minimum of delay or hassle. As noted in the New Yorker, CAR-T requires bringing a manufacturing lens to medicine. Supporting health care providers means creating true collaboration between digital technology providers, hospitals, logistics providers, biotech and pharma companies, and manufacturing, like the Boston initiative I described earlier.

Standardization is often decried as cookie-cutter medicine. In this space, however, it is the wave of the future.

While patient biology is unique, and each patients cells may produce a one-of-a-kind manufacturing batch, essential parts of the production and delivery process should be as predictable and easy as possible. One key place to start is in-process drug labeling. When patients cells become the raw material for advanced therapies, these labels become more complex and more necessary: When a patient is about to receive a cell therapy infusion, its essential that the name on the bag of genetically re-engineered cells is his or hers. The Standards Coordinating Body, an FDA-funded but independent nonprofit, is now leading an industry-wide labeling initiative for cell and gene therapies.

There are other clear signs that the advanced therapies field gets it when it comes to infrastructure needs, such as the inclusion of digital health and handling of patient data as categories of focus in the federal Cures 2.0 initiative currently circulating in Washington. But much remains to be done.

In centers caring for individuals with cancer and rare diseases, thousands of patients are today receiving advanced therapies that are transforming their lives. We need to make that possible for many, many more by working together to industrialize and personalize in parallel.

Amy DuRoss is the CEO and co-founder of Vineti, a digital technology company that provides next-generation software platforms for advanced therapies. Before that she was managing director for new business creation for GE Ventures, chief business officer at Navigenics, the co-founder and executive director of Proposition 71, Californias $3 billion stem cell research initiative that passed in 2004, and chief of staff at the resulting California Institute for Regenerative Medicine.

Here is the original post:
Making advanced therapies takes industrializing personalization - STAT

Posted in Stem Cells | Comments Off on Making advanced therapies takes industrializing personalization – STAT

LncRNA KLF3-AS1 in Human Mesenchymal Stem Cell-Derived Exosomes Ameliorates Pyroptosis of Cardiomyocytes and Myocardial Infarction Through…

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:46 am

AIM:

Myocardial infarction(MI) is a severe disease with increased mortality and disability rates, posing heavy economic burden for society. Exosomes were uncovered to mediate intercellular communication after MI. This study aims to explore the effect and mechanism of lncRNA KLF3-AS1 in exosomes secreted by human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) on pyroptosis of cardiomyocytes and MI.

Exosomes from hMSCs were isolated and identified. Exosomes from hMSCs with transfection of KLF3-AS1 for overexpression were injected into MI rat model or incubated with hypoxia cardiomyocytes. Effect of KLF3-AS1 on MI area, cell viability, apoptosis, and pyroptosis was determined. The relationship among miR-138-5p, KLF3-AS1, and Sirt1 was verified by dual-luciferase reporter assay. Normal cardiomyocytes were transfected with miR-138-5p inhibitor or sh-Sirt1 to clarify whether alteration of miR-138-5p or sh-Sirt1 can regulate the effect of KLF3-AS1 on cardiomyocytes.

Exosomes from hMSCs were successfully extracted. Transfection of KLF3-AS1 exosome in rats and incubation with KLF3-AS1 exosome in hypoxia cardiomyocytes both verified that overexpression of KLF3-AS1 in exosomes leads to reduced MI area, decreased cell apoptosis and pyroptosis, and attenuated MI progression. KLF3-AS1 can sponge miR-138-5p to regulate Sirt1 expression. miR-138-5p inhibitor transfection and KLF3-AS1 exosome incubation contribute to attenuated pyroptosis and MI both in vivo and in vitro, while transfection of sh-Sirt1 could reverse the protective effect of exosomal KLF3-AS1 on hypoxia cardiomyocytes.

LncRNA KLF3-AS1 in exosomes secreted from hMSCs by acting as a ceRNA to sponge miR-138-5p can regulate Sirt1 so as to inhibit cell pyroptosis and attenuate MI progression.

Read the original post:
LncRNA KLF3-AS1 in Human Mesenchymal Stem Cell-Derived Exosomes Ameliorates Pyroptosis of Cardiomyocytes and Myocardial Infarction Through...

Posted in Stem Cells | Comments Off on LncRNA KLF3-AS1 in Human Mesenchymal Stem Cell-Derived Exosomes Ameliorates Pyroptosis of Cardiomyocytes and Myocardial Infarction Through…

Pike River widow ‘on the up’ after stem cell treatment for cancer – Stuff.co.nz

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:46 am

Pike River widow Anna Osborne is "on the up" and out of hospital in time for Christmas.

Osborne, whose husband Milton died in the 2010 Pike River mine disaster, had stem-cell treatment for Hodgkinlymphoma in October.

She had been told she only had a month to a year to live without it.

Phil Walter/Getty

Anna Osborne, from the Pike River Family Reference Group, embraces Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern at the mine entrance earlier this year.

Friend and Pike River mother SonyaRockhouse said Osborne's treatment went well, but there was still a long road ahead.

READ MORE:*Pike River mine tunnel entry an important moment for widow*Pike River re-entry team breaks through into mine drift*Pike River widow 'full of nerves' for mine drift re-entry*The road to getting back into Pike River

"I think the treatment is working for now. She just got her bloods done and they were good and they are the most important thing," she said.

Kevin Stent/Stuff

Osborne and Sonya Rockhouse at the announcement the Government would re-enter the Pike River mine.

Osbornewasdiagnosed with Hodgkinlymphoma in 2002 when she was 36.

She had radiation for six weeks and went into remission, but the cancercame back just before the Pike River tragedy in November 2010, when 29 men where killed in a series of explosions at the coal mine. Osborne helped campaign for thelegalisation of medicinal cannabiswhile undergoing chemotherapy in 2015.

Her stem-cells wereharvested and frozenin August. The stem cell transplanttook place in Christchurch in October aftersix days of intensive chemotherapy.

JOANNE CARROLL/Stuff

Anna Osborne, pictured during treatment for Hodgkins lymphoma in 2016.

The treatment had its own risks.

Osborne was in isolation for five weeks but after shereturned home, she hadsome set backs and small complications,Rockhousesaid.

"She was so crook. She lost a lot of weight. She's had two or three trips to hospital since then," she said.

Supplied/Pike River Recovery Agency

Mine worker Bryan Heslip offers a hand to Osborne and Rockhouse after entering the Pike River mine drift during the re-entry operation.

"She's on the up now,but [there is] still a long way to go. She's at home and is getting some colour back in her cheeks, [and is] starting to look like her old self."

Rockhouse said Osborne was focusing on her recovery and hoped to be able to go to the Pike River mine for the next milestone, which was removing the 170m seal expected to take place in January.

See the original post here:
Pike River widow 'on the up' after stem cell treatment for cancer - Stuff.co.nz

Posted in Stem Cells | Comments Off on Pike River widow ‘on the up’ after stem cell treatment for cancer – Stuff.co.nz

10-Year-Old Walks Graduation Stage for Father with Leukemia – Breitbart

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:45 am

Nathaniel Beales ten-year-old son, Noah, took his place at his University of Oklahoma graduation on Saturday.

Nathaniel Beale was diagnosed with leukemia in July but completed his degree during treatment. Unfortunately, he was physically unable to attend the graduation celebration of his hard-won academic victory due to an upcoming surgery.

In his place, ten-year-old Noah Beale stepped up to support his father by taking his place at the graduation ceremony. Beale watched a livestream of his son accepting the diploma.

Leukemia affects roughly 1.6 percent of men and women, with 414,773 suffering from the deadly blood cancer in the United States. 61,780 new cases have been reported, and 22,840 have died in 2019 alone. As described by the National Cancer Institute:

Leukemia is cancer that starts in the tissue that forms blood. Most blood cells develop from cells in the bone marrow called stem cells. In a person with leukemia, the bone marrow makes abnormal white blood cells. The abnormal cells are leukemia cells. Unlike normal blood cells, leukemia cells dont die when they should. They may crowd out normal white blood cells, red blood cells, and platelets. This makes it hard for normal blood cells to do their work.

While there is no cure, over 62 percent of patients survive five or more years after diagnosis. With the support of his son and family, Beales fight for life continues.

More:
10-Year-Old Walks Graduation Stage for Father with Leukemia - Breitbart

Posted in Oklahoma Stem Cells | Comments Off on 10-Year-Old Walks Graduation Stage for Father with Leukemia – Breitbart

9 Symptoms of Type 1 & Type 2 Diabetes: Complications, Causes …

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:41 am

What are the chronic complications of diabetes?

These diabetes complications are related to blood vessel diseases and are generally classified into small vessel disease, such as those involving the eyes, kidneys and nerves (microvascular disease), and large vessel disease involving the heart and blood vessels (macrovascular disease). Diabetes accelerates hardening of the arteries (atherosclerosis) of the larger blood vessels, leading to coronary heart disease (angina or heart attack), strokes, and pain in the lower extremities because of lack of blood supply (claudication).

The major eye complication of diabetes is called diabetic retinopathy. Diabetic retinopathy occurs in patients who have had diabetes for at least five years. Diseased small blood vessels in the back of the eye cause the leakage of protein and blood in the retina. Disease in these blood vessels also causes the formation of small aneurysms (microaneurysms), and new but brittle blood vessels (neovascularization). Spontaneous bleeding from the new and brittle blood vessels can lead to retinal scarring and retinal detachment, thus impairing vision.

To treat diabetic retinopathy, a laser is used to destroy and prevent the recurrence of the development of these small aneurysms and brittle blood vessels. Approximately 50% of patients with diabetes will develop some degree of diabetic retinopathy after 10 years of diabetes, and 80% retinopathy after 15 years of the disease. Poor control of blood sugar and blood pressure further aggravates eye disease in diabetes.

Cataracts and glaucoma are also more common among diabetics. It is also important to note that since the lens of the eye lets water through, if blood sugar concentrations vary a lot, the lens of the eye will shrink and swell with fluid accordingly. As a result, blurry vision is very common in poorly controlled diabetes. Patients are usually discouraged from getting a new eyeglass prescription until their blood sugar is controlled. This allows for a more accurate assessment of what kind of glasses prescription is required.

Kidney damage from diabetes is called diabetic nephropathy. The onset of kidney disease and its progression is extremely variable. Initially, diseased small blood vessels in the kidneys cause the leakage of protein in the urine. Later on, the kidneys lose their ability to cleanse and filter blood. The accumulation of toxic waste products in the blood leads to the need for dialysis. Dialysis involves using a machine that serves the function of the kidney by filtering and cleaning the blood. In patients who do not want to undergo chronic dialysis, kidney transplantation can be considered.

The progression of nephropathy in patients can be significantly slowed by controlling high blood pressure, and by aggressively treating high blood sugar levels. Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE inhibitors) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) used in treating high blood pressure may also benefit kidney disease in patients with diabetes.

Nerve damage from diabetes is called diabetic neuropathy and is also caused by disease of small blood vessels. In essence, the blood flow to the nerves is limited, leaving the nerves without blood flow, and they get damaged or die as a result (a term known as ischemia). Symptoms of diabetic nerve damage include numbness, burning, and aching of the feet and lower extremities. When the nerve disease causes a complete loss of sensation in the feet, patients may not be aware of injuries to the feet, and fail to properly protect them. Shoes or other protection should be worn as much as possible. Seemingly minor skin injuries should be attended to promptly to avoid serious infections. Because of poor blood circulation, diabetic foot injuries may not heal. Sometimes, minor foot injuries can lead to serious infection, ulcers, and even gangrene, necessitating surgical amputation of toes, feet, and other infected parts.

Diabetic nerve damage can affect the nerves that are important for penile erection, causing erectile dysfunction (ED, impotence). Erectile dysfunction can also be caused by poor blood flow to the penis from diabetic blood vessel disease.

Diabetic neuropathy can also affect nerves to the stomach and intestines, causing nausea, weight loss, diarrhea, and other symptoms of gastroparesis (delayed emptying of food contents from the stomach into the intestines, due to ineffective contraction of the stomach muscles).

The pain of diabetic nerve damage may respond to traditional treatments with certain medications such as gabapentin (Neurontin), phenytoin (Dilantin), and carbamazepine (Tegretol) that are traditionally used in the treatment of seizure disorders. Amitriptyline (Elavil, Endep) and desipramine (Norpraminine) are medications that are traditionally used for depression. While many of these medications are not indicated specifically for the treatment of diabetes related nerve pain, they are used by physicians commonly.

The pain of diabetic nerve damage may also improve with better blood sugar control, though unfortunately blood glucose control and the course of neuropathy do not always go hand in hand. Newer medications for nerve pain include Pregabalin (Lyrica) and duloxetine (Cymbalta).

Originally posted here:
9 Symptoms of Type 1 & Type 2 Diabetes: Complications, Causes ...

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on 9 Symptoms of Type 1 & Type 2 Diabetes: Complications, Causes …

Scientists Observe Type 2 Diabetes Develop for the First Time Caused by Overspill of Fat – SciTechDaily

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:41 am

For the first time, scientists have been able to observe people developing Type 2 diabetes and confirmed that fat over-spills from the liver into the pancreas, triggering the chronic condition.

The research, led by Professor Roy Taylor at Newcastle University, UK, is published in the academic journal, Cell Metabolism.

The study involved a group of people from Tyneside who previously had Type 2 diabetes but had lost weight and successfully reversed the condition as part of the DiRECT trial, which was funded by Diabetes UK and led by Professors Roy Taylor and Mike Lean (Glasgow University).

The majority remained non-diabetic for the rest of the two year study, however, a small group went on to re-gain the weight and re-developed Type 2 diabetes.

Professor Roy Taylor, from the Newcastle University Institute of Translational and Clinical Research, explained what the advanced scanning techniques and blood monitoring revealed.

He said: We saw that when a person accumulates too much fat, which should be stored under the skin, then it has to go elsewhere in the body. The amount that can be stored under the skin varies from person to person, indicating a personal fat threshold above which fat can cause mischief.

When fat cannot be safely stored under the skin, it is then stored inside the liver, and over-spills to the rest of the body including the pancreas. This clogs up the pancreas, switching off the genes which direct how insulin should effectively be produced, and this causes Type 2 diabetes.

This research by Professor Taylor confirms his Twin Cycle Hypothesis that Type 2 diabetes is caused by excess fat actually within both the liver and pancreas, and especially that this process is reversible.

This latest paper builds on previous Newcastle studies supported by Diabetes UK showing exactly why Type 2 diabetes can be reversed back to normal glucose control. Those studies led to the large DiRECT trial which showed that Primary Care staff can achieve remission of Type 2 diabetes by using a low calorie diet with support to maintain the weight loss.

A quarter of participants achieved a staggering 15 kg or more weight loss, and of these, almost nine out of 10 people put their Type 2 diabetes into remission. After two years, more than one third of the group had been free of diabetes and off all diabetes medication for at least two years.

In 2020, this approach to management of short duration Type 2 diabetes is to be piloted in the NHS in up to 5,000 people across England, and a similar program is being rolled out in Scotland.

Professor Taylor adds: This means we can now see Type 2 diabetes as a simple condition where the individual has accumulated more fat than they can cope with.

Importantly this means that through diet and persistence, patients are able to lose the fat and potentially reverse their diabetes. The sooner this is done after diagnosis, the more likely it is that remission can be achieved.

The team are continuing work to establish what may affect an individuals personal threshold and are supporting the roll out of the NHS Initiatives in both England and Scotland. Life Without Diabetes The definitive guide to understanding and reversing your Type 2 diabetes by Professor Roy Taylor will be published by Short Books on 26th December 2019.

Reference: Hepatic Lipoprotein Export and Remission of Human Type 2 Diabetes after Weight Loss by Ahmad Al-Mrabeh, Sviatlana V. Zhyzhneuskaya, Carl Peters, Alison C. Barnes, Shaden Melhem, Aaron Jesuthasan, Benjamin Aribisala, Kieren G. Hollingsworth, Georg Lietz, John C. Mathers, Naveed Sattar, Michael E.J. Lean and Roy Taylor, 19 December 2019, Cell Metabolism.DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2019.11.018

Read the rest here:
Scientists Observe Type 2 Diabetes Develop for the First Time Caused by Overspill of Fat - SciTechDaily

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Scientists Observe Type 2 Diabetes Develop for the First Time Caused by Overspill of Fat – SciTechDaily

Angela Bassett Raising Awareness About Diabetes And Heart Disease Through Know Your Heart Intiative – MadameNoire

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:41 am

Source: WENN/Avalon / WENN

Angela Bassett is focused on raising awareness about diabetes and cardiovascular issues in the black community. TheBlack Panther actress is partnering with the American Diabetes Association and the American Heart Association for the Know Diabetes by Heartinitiative to help educate Americans about the risk of heart disease, strokes, heart attacks and diabetes.

Bassetts work with the two health organizations hits close to home. She lost her mother to heart complications from diabetes.

I wish my family had recognized the link earlier and thats why I want everyone living with Type 2 diabetes to know about the connection to heart disease and stroke and know that they can do something about it, she said in a press release according to Black Enterprise.

Diabetes and heart disease disproportionately affects people of color, so this initiative is much needed. According to research, African-Americans are 1.7 times more likely to have diabetes than whites. African-Americans are also 20 times more likely to develop heart disease as compared to whites.

Watch Bassetts ad below.

Here is the original post:
Angela Bassett Raising Awareness About Diabetes And Heart Disease Through Know Your Heart Intiative - MadameNoire

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Angela Bassett Raising Awareness About Diabetes And Heart Disease Through Know Your Heart Intiative – MadameNoire

Cardiovascular Disease, Technology and Personalized Care Highlighted in ADA’s 2020 Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes – P&T Community

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:41 am

ARLINGTON, Va., Dec. 20, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- A strong recurring message of individualizing patient care is echoed throughout the American Diabetes Association's Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes2020 (Standards of Care)published today. Based upon the latest scientific diabetes research and clinical trials, the Standards of Care includes new and updated recommendations and guidelines for caring for people with diabetes. The Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes2020 includes simplified figures and tables that more easily guide providers through treatment options and individualized recommendations for treatment of cardiovascular disease based on patients' pre-existing conditions. Special considerations for older adults with type 1 diabetes have also been added to address the treatment of this growing population, as well as revised recommendations and additional supporting evidence for use of rapidly changing diabetes technology.

The 2019 Update to Management of Hyperglycemia in Type 2 Diabetes, 2018. A Consensus Report by the American Diabetes Association (ADA) and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD)was also published and includes complimentary information on the treatment of type 2 diabetes based on important research findings from large cardiovascular outcomes trials published in 2019 and has been incorporated into the Standards of Care2020.

The Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes2020provides the latest in comprehensive, evidence-based recommendations for the diagnosis and treatment of children and adults with type 1, type 2, or gestational diabetes, strategies for the prevention or delay of type 2 diabetes, and therapeutic approaches that can reduce complications, mitigate cardiovascular and renal risk, and improve health outcomes. The Standards of Care is available online today, December 20, 2019, at 2:00 p.m. ET at https:///care.diabetesjournals.org and is published as a supplement to the January 2020 issue of Diabetes Care.

Some notable updates and additions to the Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes2020include:

Cardiovascular disease in diabetes

Pharmacologic updates

Glycemic targets

Personalizing patient care

Updates to the Standards of Care are established and revised by the ADA's Professional Practice Committee(PPC). The committee is a multidisciplinary team of 16 leading U.S. experts in the field of diabetes care and includes physicians, diabetes educators, registered dietitians, and others whose experience includes adult and pediatric endocrinology, epidemiology, public health, cardiovascular risk management, microvascular complications, preconception and pregnancy care, weight management and diabetes prevention, and use of technology in diabetes management. Two designated representatives of the American College of Cardiology (ACC) reviewed and provided feedback on the "Cardiovascular Disease and Risk Management" section, and this section received endorsement from ACC.

"The American Diabetes Association has developed and provided diabetes care standards, guidelines and related documents since 1989, and its clinical practice recommendations are integral resources for health care professionals,"said PPC chair Joshua J. Neumiller, PharmD, CDE, FASCP,Vice Chair and Allen I. White Distinguished Associate Professor of Pharmacotherapy at Washington State University. "As diabetes research and care methods continue to evolve, so do the recommendations and clinical guidelines set forth by the ADA. Through the Standards of Care, the Living Standards and other supplemental tools, the ADA and its Professional Practice Committee strive to ensure care providers, patients, researchers, health plans, and policymakersstay abreast of the most current, research driven components of diabetes care."

Theonline version of the Standards of Care, or theLiving Standardswill continue to be annotated in real-time with necessary updates if new evidence or regulatory changes merit immediate incorporation through the living Standards of Care process. The ADA also publishes the abridged Standards of Careyearly for primary care providers in its journal, Clinical Diabetes,and offers a convenient Standards of Careappas well as a Standards of Care pocket chart. Other Standards of Care resources, including a webcastwith continuing education credit and a full slide deck, can be found on DiabetesPro.

About Diabetes CareDiabetes Care,a monthly journal of the American Diabetes Association (ADA), is the highest-ranked, peer-reviewed journal in the field of diabetes treatment and prevention. Dedicated to increasing knowledge, stimulating research and promoting better health care for people with diabetes, the journal publishes original articles on human studies in clinical care, education and nutrition; epidemiology, health services and psychosocial research; emerging treatments and technologies; and pathophysiology and complications. Diabetes Care also publishes the ADA's recommendations and statements, clinically relevant review articles, editorials and commentaries. Topics covered are of interest to clinically oriented physicians, researchers, epidemiologists, psychologists, diabetes educators and other health care professionals.

About the American Diabetes AssociationEvery day more than 4,000 people are newly diagnosed with diabetes in America. Nearly 115 million Americans have diabetes or prediabetes and are striving to manage their lives while living with the disease. The American Diabetes Association (ADA) is the nation's leading voluntary health organization fighting to bend the curve on the diabetes epidemic and help people living with diabetes thrive. For nearly 80 years the ADA has been driving discovery and research to treat, manage and prevent diabetes, while working relentlessly for a cure. We help people with diabetes thrive by fighting for their rights and developing programs, advocacy and education designed to improve their quality of life. Diabetes has brought us together. What we do next will make us Connected for Life. To learn more or to get involved, visit us at diabetes.org or call 1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383). Join the fight with us on Facebook (American Diabetes Association), Twitter (@AmDiabetesAssn) and Instagram (@AmDiabetesAssn).

Contact:Sabrena Pringle, 703-299-2014press@diabetes.org

View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/cardiovascular-disease-technology-and-personalized-care-highlighted-in-adas-2020-standards-of-medical-care-in-diabetes-300978471.html

SOURCE American Diabetes Association

Read the original here:
Cardiovascular Disease, Technology and Personalized Care Highlighted in ADA's 2020 Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes - P&T Community

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Cardiovascular Disease, Technology and Personalized Care Highlighted in ADA’s 2020 Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes – P&T Community

SDUSD Programs aim to curb obesity and diabetes in students – 10News

Posted: December 23, 2019 at 9:41 am

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Students in the San Diego Unified School District have a handful of programs designed to keep them active and help ward off childhood obesity.

In 2016, the district began it's Healthy Initiative. So far, they've created wellness committees in every school. They also put their IMPACT Program into 20% of the campuses, with plans to expand in the next few years.

"IMPACT stands for Increased Movement in Physical Activity during Class Time," explains SDUSD's Kate McDevitt. It gets the students 30 extra minutes each week outside, learning easy-to-replicate activities that they can take home.

"They still have time with their PE teacher, but now classroom teachers can engage their students in station based physical activity," says McDevitt. She says it helps with their focus throughout the day.

"You can see them light up and really engage in the classroom activities and the earning theyre doing when they have time to move," she says.

In addition to the IMPACT program, many schools have local gardens where kids learn about fresh fruits and vegetables. Cafeterias have replaced traditional, high calorie options with foods that are healthier. And some schools have changed the way they do celebrations.

"We have healthy celebrations," says Ocean Beach Elementary Principal Marco Drapeau. "We still celebrate birthdays and holidays. We still make a big deal out of them. But we dont hand out the sugary treats."

The need for a more health-based approach to school comes at a time when kids' risk of obesity is increasing. According to the CDC, one in five kids in the US is obese. And one in three kids born since 2000 will develop Type 2 Diabetes over the course of their lives.

Drapeau says schools are on the front lines in the fight.

"Were at a stage right now where were competing with this," Drapeau says, holding his hands as if he's holding a phone and watching tv. "We want the kids to understand theres some real viable options for them outside staring at a screen."

Follow this link:
SDUSD Programs aim to curb obesity and diabetes in students - 10News

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on SDUSD Programs aim to curb obesity and diabetes in students – 10News

Page 1,217«..1020..1,2161,2171,2181,219..1,2301,240..»