Daily Express

Diabetes sufferers more likely to get Parkinson’s

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the body resists insulin, necessary for converting glucose into energy. As brain cells are particular­ly reliant on glucose for energy, it has long been speculated the two diseases could be linked. The study by UCL, the University of Oxford and Queen Mary University of London followed more than two million people diagnosed with Type 2 between 1999 and 2011. None had a Parkinson’s diagnosis. They were studied alongside a comparison group of more than six million people without Type 2. Among the people with diabetes 14,252 had a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease during a later admission, compared with the comparison group.

Experts found Type 2 sufferers were 32 per cent more likely to have a subsequent diagnosis of Parkinson’s.

The link was strongest among those aged between 25 and 44 and people with more complicati­ons from diabetes.

Experts say the link could be due to a shared genetic predisposi­tion to both conditions. Type 2 now affects one in 10 British adults. The findings could now help advance treatment for Parkinson’s. Dr Beckie Port, of Parkinson’s hospital 20,878 in UK, said: “Understand­ing the link between these two could be key to developing treatments that slow the course of Parkinson’s, something that no current treatments can do.” Kathryn Kirchner, of Diabetes UK, said the study “does not show that Type 2 causes Parkinson’s. We would need further research to confirm whether these conditions are related and then work out the genetic or biological processes that could be behind the link.” The research is published in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

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