Women's health deteriorate more rapidly than men prior to diabetes
A
new study has found that prior to the onset of type 2 diabetes (T2D), women
with versus without prediabetes
experience significantly have larger adverse differences in their cardio
metabolic health than men. However, the mechanisms responsible for these sex
differences remain a mystery.
The
research, conducted by the Maastricht University Medical Centre, aimed to
evaluate sex-related differences in cardiovascular risk factor levels, both
before and after the onset of T2D.
T2D is known to
reduce or even reverse the protective effect of being female on the risk of
developing cardiovascular disease. The metabolic changes that eventually lead
to T2D can precede the development of hyperglycemia (caused by poorly
controlled blood glucose levels) by years or even decades. Despite this, there
has been a little investigation into whether women suffer a relatively worse
cardiometabolic risk profile before developing the disease. Read
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