JCDR - Register at Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research
Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research, ISSN - 0973 - 709X
Original Article DOI : 10.7860/JCDR/2012/4442.2578
Year : 2012 | Month : Nov | Volume : 6 | Issue : 9 Full Version Page : 1610 - 1611

Screening of young Adults for Future Risk of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus - A Big Concern for Society & Nation

A Pranita1, AV Phadke2, JS Kharche3, B. Balsubramaniyan4, AR Joshi5

1 Assistant Professor, Department of Physiology.
2 Assistant Professor, Department of Physiology.
3 Assistant Professor, Department of Physiology.
4 Professor, Department of Physiology.
5 Professor & Head, Department of Physiology, Bharati Vidyapeeth Deemed University Medical College, Pune. 43 Maharashtra, India.


NAME, ADDRESS, E-MAIL ID OF THE CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Dr. Pranita A, Assistant Professor, Department of Physiology, Shreeram Darshan, Phase 1, Building No. A-1, Flat No -10, Floor-5th, Surve No.82/. Opp.Sawant Vihar, Phase Ii .Pune Satara Road. Katraj, Pune- 411046, Maharashtra, India.
Phone: 9850062612
E-mail: Pranita76@gmail.com
Abstract

Keywords

Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (D.M.) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in developing countries like India. It comprises of a group of common metabolic disorders and is characterized by a state of chronic hyperglycaemia due to a defective production or action of insulin.

The rising prevalence of type 2 D.M. is closely associated with industrialization and socio-economic development. The recent World Health Organization report suggests that over 19% of the world’s diabetic population currently resides in India. This translates to over 35 million diabetic subjects and this number is projected to increase to nearly 80 million by 2030.

Type 2 diabetes, which was a disease of the middle-aged and the elderly previously, has recently escalated in all the age groups and is now being identified in the younger age groups. It is of great concern as to how to prevent this “new epidemic” from destroying the future generations which include adolescents and children, especially in high-risk populations.

Unfortunately, more than 50% of the diabetic patients in India remain unaware of their diabetic status, which increases the risk of the development of diabetic complications in them. This underscores the need for mass awareness and screening programmes to detect diabetes at an early stage. For this purpose, we have used a simplified Indian Diabetes Risk Score (IDRS) [1] for the prediction of diabetes in undergraduate medical students. IDRS requires answers to three simple questions and a waist measurement.

In our study [2], we found that among 126 students, 8%, 79% and 13% were in high, moderate and low risk groups respectively for the development of type 2 D.M. This underscores the need for further investigations to detect diabetes at an early stage and to overcome the disease burden of diabetes in the future.

Environmental factors play a key role in the development of type 2 diabetes. Globalization and industrialization lead to an increase in the prevalence of obesity and the metabolic syndrome in adults and particularly, in children. The main causes are - increasing urbanization, nutrition transition and reduced physical activity.

Most of the children who develop type 2 diabetes have a family history of type 2 diabetes. It was found that 45–80% children had a parent with type 2 diabetes [3]. Upto 60%–90% of the youth who develop diabetes have acanthosis nigricans, a thickening and hyper pigmentation of the skin at the neck and the flexural areas, which is due to insulin resistance. This manifestation is common at younger ages than at adulthood and so it can be used as a marker for the youth [4] who are at risk for type 2 diabetes.

The available data on the long-term complications of type 2 diabetes such as nephropathy microalbuminuria, hypertension, dyslipidaemia, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome and poor blood glucose control [5,6]. In young people underscores the severity of the disease. The persistence of obesity interferes with the patients’ response to the treatment and it exacerbates the comorbidities .

This can be prevented in youth by addressing the epidemic of childhood obesity, as the economic cost of obesity and related diseases in the developing countries have meagre health budgets. Thus, there is an urgent need to initiate large-scale community intervention programs which focus on increasing the physical activity and healthier food options, particularly for children. The international health agencies and the respective government should intensively focus on primordial and primary prevention programs for obesity and the metabolic syndrome in children and young adults.

References

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