Scientists looked at the link between
diabetes and depression and have found that diabetes contributes to depression
and vice versa.
The study, published yesterday in the “Journal
of the American Medical Association,” indicated that people who are treated for
type 2 diabetes had a 52% higher risk of developing symptoms of depression. Researcher
Sherita Hill Golden, MD, of Johns
Hopkins University,
and colleagues tracked an ethnically diverse group of about 5,000 men and women
aged 45 to 84 for about three years. They were selected in 2000-2002 and followed
until 2004-2005. They looked at the risk of developing type two diabetes in a
number of adults who did and didn’t have depressive symptoms about three years
prior, but also in adults without depressive symptoms.
Scientists found that people with symptoms
of depression were 42 percent more likely to develop diabetes by the end of the
study than those without such symptoms. The findings also suggest a link
between depressive symptoms, the development of diabetes and other factors,
such as obesity, lack of physical activity and smoking.
“When we looked at the people in our study
who had elevated symptoms of depression, they were more likely to eat more
calories, they exercised less, and they were more likely to be current smokers.
And as a consequence, they were also more obese,” Dr. Sherita Hill Golden of
John Hopkins University School said in a telephone interview with Reuters. They
also found that the psychological stress associated with diabetes management may
lead to elevated depressive symptoms. Depression also pushes up the levels of
stress hormones.
To conclude, people with symptoms of
depression are more likely to develop diabetes than those without such symptoms.
The more serious the symptoms, the higher the risk of diabetes, the study
indicated.
|