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Diabetics' Hearts Fueled By Fats
The heart muscle of people
with diabetes relies on fat as an energy source, researchers
report. The finding could explain why 65 percent of people with
diabetes die from heart attack or stroke, they add.
A team at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
compared the heart function of 11 type 1 diabetics and 11 non-diabetics.
They found that the cardiac muscle of people with diabetes is
heavily dependent on fat for energy and relies very little on
the usual energy source, glucose (sugar).
In comparison, the heart muscle of people without diabetes does
not have a strong preference for fat and can use either glucose
or fat as a fuel source, depending on the person's blood composition,
hormone levels or how hard their heart is working.
"The diabetic heart's overdependence on fat could partly explain
why diabetic patients suffer more pronounced manifestations of
coronary artery disease," study senior author Dr. Robert J. Gropler,
a professor of radiology, medicine and biomedical engineering,
said in a prepared statement.
"The heart needs to use much more oxygen to metabolize fats
than glucose, making the diabetic heart more sensitive to drops
in oxygen levels that occur with coronary artery blockage," said
Gropler, who is also director of the cardiovascular imaging laboratory
at the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology at the School of Medicine.
"We believe it's not enough to control blood glucose in diabetes.
You also have to target fat delivery to the heart. If you decrease
fat delivery through a combination of diet, exercise and drugs,
you'll improve the heart's ability to use other energy sources,
which will improve health," he said.
The findings are currently online and appear in the February
7 print issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology .
The U.S. National Diabetes Information Clearinghouse has more
about diabetes,
heart disease and stroke .
SOURCE: Washington University School of Medicine, news release,
Feb. 7, 2006
Reference
Source 62
February 7,
2006
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