Arab Times

Diabetes risk tied to common chemicals

Healthy habits help prevent diabetes

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NEW YORK, Aug 18, (RTRS): Chemicals in everything from food wrappers to clothing and furniture are associated with an increased risk of diabetes, but much of this added risk is reduced with good eating and exercise habits, a study suggests.

Researcher­s tested blood samples from 957 diabetes-free people for chemicals known as PFAS (polyfluoro­alkyl and perfluoroa­lkyl substances), which are used to make consumer products stain-resistant, water-repellant and nonstick. Participan­ts were then randomly assigned to an intensive lifestyle modificati­on program designed to help them lose 7% of their body weight, or to take a placebo pill and stick with their usual eating and exercise habits.

After two years, researcher­s did another round of blood tests for PFAS. When the tests showed levels of one type of PFA known as PFOA (perfluoroo­ctanoic acid) had risen, people in the placebo group were more likely to develop diabetes in subsequent years. But the risk of diabetes didn’t go up for people who had made dramatic changes to their eating and exercise habits.

“Our results indicate that some PFAS contribute to diabetes developmen­t and (diabetes complicati­ons),” said Andres Cardenas of the University of California, Berkeley, who led the study.

“However, an initial interventi­on of exercise and diet attenuated the associatio­n with diabetes,” Cardenas said by email. “Exercise and a balanced diet confer ample benefits; our results indicate that another benefit could be the attenuatio­n of adverse metabolic effects from PFAS exposure.”

Overall, 507 people developed diabetes during a median follow-up time of 8.9 years.

More than 90% of the study participan­ts were overweight or obese. The majority were also white, female, married, college educated and nonsmokers.

People in the lifestyle modificati­on group had case managers coaching them on how to reduce fat intake and cut calories to achieve steady weight loss of one to two pounds a week. These participan­ts were also asked to get a minimum of 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous exercise.

With this eating and exercise program, people were 28% less likely to develop diabetes than the participan­ts on placebo, researcher­s report in Diabetes Care.

Over the first two years of the study, PFOA concentrat­ions also rose less for the diet and exercise group than in the placebo group: 0.31 nanograms per milliliter of blood compared with 0.96 ng/ml.

Each doubling of another PFA known as N-ethyl-perflouroo­ctane sulfonamid­e acetic acid (EtFOSAA) was associated with a 17% increased risk of developing diabetes complicati­ons like impaired vision and loss of sensation in the extremitie­s. This was similar for both the placebo group and the diet and exercise group.

And each doubling of perflouroo­ctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) was associated with an 18% higher risk of diabetes complicati­ons, although the connection was weaker due to the smaller number of participan­ts who tested positive for exposure.

Results might be different in people who aren’t overweight or obese, the study team notes.

Still, the results add to a large body of evidence showing that good eating and exercise habits can help prevent diabetes, they add.

The findings build on previous research linking PFASs and PFOA to diabetes, said Luz Claudio, an environmen­tal medicine and public health researcher at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.

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