Special Focus: Diabetes in Women
Approximately 9.3 million or 8.7% of all women
over the age of 20 in the United States have diabetes. However, about
one-third of them do not know it. The prevalence of diabetes is at
least 2-4 times higher among African American, Hispanic/Latino, American
Indian, and Asian/Pacific Islander women than among white women. Because
of the increasing lifespan of women and the rapid growth of minority
populations, the number of women in the United States at high risk
for diabetes and its complications is increasing.
Diabetes is the fifth-deadliest disease in the United States, and it has no cure. The total annual economic cost of diabetes in 2002 was estimated to be $132 billion, or one out of every 10 health care dollars spent in the United States.
Women with diabetes have an increased risk of vaginal infections and complications during pregnancy. For women who do not currently have diabetes, pregnancy brings the risk of gestational diabetes. Gestational diabetes develops in 2% to 5% of all pregnancies but disappears when a pregnancy is over. Women who have had gestational diabetes are at an increased risk for developing type 2 diabetes later in life.
Women and diabetes-related
complications
The risk for cardiovascular disease, the most common
complication attributable to diabetes, is more serious among women
than men. Deaths from heart disease in women with diabetes have increased
23% over the past 30 years, compared to a 27% decrease in women without
diabetes.
The risk of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is 50% higher among women than men. DKA, often called diabetic coma, is a condition brought on by poorly controlled diabetes and marked by high blood glucose levels and ketones (by-products of fat metabolism in the blood). Although it is accompanied by high blood glucose levels, DKA is not caused by high blood sugar; it is caused by lack of insulin. Before insulin therapy was available, DKA was the predominant cause of death from diabetes.
Women with diabetes are 7.6 times as likely to suffer peripheral vascular disease (PVD) than women without diabetes. PVD is a disorder resulting in reduced flow of blood and oxygen to tissues in the feet and legs. The principal symptom of PVD is intermittent claudication (pain in the thigh, calf, or buttocks during exercise).
Pregnancy
and Diabetes
Pregnancy demands more insulin in the body than
normal because of the increased production of hormones that can lead
to insulin resistance. For women with diabetes, excellent blood glucose
control before conception and then throughout pregnancy is vital to
the health of the baby and the mother.
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The rate of major congenital malformations in babies born to women with preexisting diabetes varies from 0-5% among women who receive preconception care to 10% among women who do not receive preconception care.
- Macrosomia, large birth weight, occurs 2 to 3 times more often in diabetic pregnancies as in the general population. Because of the increased risk of fetal macrosomia, women with diabetes are 3 to 4 times more likely to have a cesarean section.
- Women with diabetes are up to 5 times as likely to develop toxemia (a disorder of unknown cause usually marked by hypertension, protein in the urine, edema, headache, and visual disturbances) and hydramnios (excessive amounts of amniotic fluid) as women without diabetes.
- Women who have given birth to a baby weighing more than 9 pounds are at increased risk for developing type 2 diabetes later in life.
- Approximately 2 to 5% of all non-diabetic pregnant women develop gestational diabetes, a form of diabetes that occurs only during pregnancy.
- Approximately 40% of women with gestational diabetes who are obese before pregnancy develop type 2 diabetes within 4 years. The chance of developing diabetes during this same period is lower if the women are less overweight.
Diabetes and birth control
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Birth control pills can affect blood glucose levels and diabetes control.
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The intrauterine device (IUD) may lead to infections. Because women with diabetes are already at a higher risk of infection, most should not use the IUD.
What is needed?
In ideal circumstances, women with diabetes will
have their disease under good control and be monitored frequently
by a health care team knowledgeable in the care of diabetes.
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Patient education is critical. People with diabetes, with the help of their health care providers, can reduce their risk for complications if they are educated about their disease, learn and practice the skills necessary to better control their blood glucose levels, as well as blood pressure and cholesterol levels, and receive regular checkups from their health care team. Smokers should stop smoking, and overweight women with diabetes should develop moderate exercise regimens under the guidance of a health care provider to help them achieve a healthy weight.
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Health care team education is vital. Because people with diabetes have a multi-system chronic disease, they are best monitored and managed by highly skilled health care professionals trained with the latest information on diabetes to help ensure early detection and appropriate treatment of the serious complications of the disease. A team approach to treating and monitoring the complex facets of this systemic disease serves the best interests of the patient.
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Non-diabetic pregnant women should be checked for gestational diabetes between the 24th and 28th weeks of pregnancy unless they are in the low-risk category. This category includes women who are less than 25 years of age, have no family history of diabetes, have a normal body weight and are not a member of an ethnic/racial group with high prevalence of diabetes (i.e., Hispanic/Latino, African American, Native American, and Asian).
For more information about Diabetes Education offered through the Women's Heart Center, click here
Source: American Diabetes Association
Special Focus Section Archives
Women & Heart Disease
Sleep Disorders in Women
Hormone Replacement Therapy & Heart Disease
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