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Diabetes: African Americans Deadly Foe
Author: Drahcir Semaj

Diabetes: African Americans Deadly Foe

Diabetes is having a devastating effect on the African American community. Diabetes is the fifth leading cause of death in African Americans and African Americans' death rates are twenty seven percent higher than whites.

Over 2.8 million African Americans have diabetes and one third of them don't know they have the disease. In addition, twenty five percent of African Americans between the ages of
65 - 74 have diabetes
and one in four African American women, over the age of 55, have been diagnosed with the disease

The cause of diabetes is a mystery, but researchers believe that both genetics and environmental factors play roles in who will develop the disease.
.
Heredity

Researchers believe that African Americans and African Immigrants are predisposed to developing diabetes. Research suggests that African Americans and recent African immigrants have inherited a "thrifty gene" from their African ancestors.

This gene may have enabled Africans to use food energy more efficiently during cycles of feast and famine. Now, with fewer cycles of feast and famine, this gene may make weight control more difficult for African Americans and African Immigrants.

This genetic predisposition, coupled with impaired glucose tolerance, is often associated with the genetic tendency toward high blood pressure. People with impaired glucose tolerance have higher than normal blood glucose levels and are at a higher risk for developing diabetes.

What is Diabetes?

Diabetes, commonly know as "sugar diabetes", is a condition that occurs when the body is unable to properly produce or use insulin. Insulin is needed by the body to process sugar, starches and other foods into energy. Diabetes is a chronic condition for which there is no known cure; diabetes is a serious disease and should not be ignored.

Diabetics often suffer from low glucose levels (sugar) in their blood. Low blood sugar levels can make you disorientated, dizzy, sweaty, hungry, have headaches, have sudden mood swings, have difficulty paying attention, or have tingling sensations around the mouth.



Types of Diabetes

Pre-diabetes is a condition that occurs when a person's blood glucose levels is higher than normal but not high enough for a diagnosis of type II diabetes. Pre-diabetes can cause damage to the heart and circulatory system, but pre-diabetes can often be controlled by controlling blood glucose levels. By controlling pre-diabetes you can often prevent or delay the onset of Type II diabetes.

Type I or juvenile-onset diabetes usually strikes people under the age of 20, but can strike at any age. Five to ten percent of African Americans who are diagnosed with diabetes are diagnosed with this type of the disease. Type I diabetes is an autoimmune disease where the body produces little or no insulin and this type of diabetes must be treated with daily insulin injections.

Type II or adult onset diabetes is responsible for ninety to ninety-five percent of diagnosed diabetes cases in African Americans. Type II results from a condition where the body fails to properly use insulin. According to the American Diabetes Association, "Type II is usually found in people over 45, who have diabetes in their family, who are overweight, who don't exercise and who have cholesterol problems." In the early stages it can often be controlled with lifestyle changes, but in the later stages diabetic pills or insulin injections are often needed.

Pregnancy related diabetes or gestational diabetes can occur in pregnant women. Gestational diabetes is often associated with high glucose blood levels or hyperglycemia. Gestational diabetes affects about four percent of all pregnant women. The disease usually goes away after delivery, but women who suffer from gestational diabetes are at a higher risk for developing diabetes later in life.

Symptoms of Diabetes

The most common symptoms of diabetes include:

•excessive urination including frequent trips to the bathroom
•increased thirst
•increased appetite
•blurred vision
•unusual weight loss
•increased fatigue
•irritability

Complications from Diabetes

Diabetes can lead to many disabling and life threatening complications. Strokes, blindness, kidney failure, heart disease, and amputations are common complications that effect African Americans who have diabetes

Kidney Disease
"Diabetes is the second leading cause of end stage kidney disease in African Americans, accounting for about thirty percent of the new cases each year," says the National Kidney Foundation of Illinois. Up to twenty-one percent of people who develop diabetes will develop kidney disease.

Amputations
Diabetes is the leading cause of non-traumatic lower-limb amputations in the United States. More than sixty percent of non-traumatic lower-limb amputations in America occur among people with diabetes and African Americans are almost three times more likely to have a lower limb amputated due to diabetes than whites. According to Center for Disease Control (CDC), about 82,000 non-traumatic lower-limb amputations were performed among people with diabetes in 2001.

Blindness
African Americans are twice as likely to suffer from diabetes related blindness. Diabetics can develop a condition called "Diabetic Retinopathy", a disease affecting the blood vessels of the eye, which can lead to impaired vision and blindness. Diabetes is the leading cause of new cases of blindness in people from 20 - 74 years of age and up to 24,000 people loose their sight each year because of diabetes.

Heart Disease
People with diabetes are up to four times more likely to develop heart disease as people who don't have diabetes. Atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) is more common in diabetics and can lead to increased risk of heart attacks, stroke, and poor circulation throughout the body.

Diabetes Risk Factors

You have a greater risk for developing diabetes if you have any of the following:

Obesity
Family history of diabetes
Pre-diabetes
Low physical activity
Age greater than 45 years
High blood pressure
High blood levels of triglycerides
HDL cholesterol of less than 35
Previous diabetes during pregnancy or baby weighing more than 9 pounds

Diabetes has had a devastating effect on the African American community; it is the fifth leading cause of death and second leading cause of end stage kidney disease in African Americans.

African Americans suffer from complications from diabetes at a much higher rate than the rest of the population. African Americans are three times more likely to have a lower limb amputated because of diabetes and twice as likely to suffer from diabetes related blindness.

If you have any of the diabetes risk factors you should contact your physician and have a blood glucose test. Also discuss with your physician lifestyle changes you can take to lower your chances of developing diabetes.

About the Author

About the Author
Drahcir Semaj
Drahcir is a freelance writer who develops content for web sites on African American issues. He can be contacted at drahcir@drachirsemaj.com

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Understanding Diabetes Anatomical Chart Laminated
The detailed, easy to read Understanding Diabetes Anatomical Chart is a fully laminated, write-on/wipe off chart with brass eyelets for hanging or portable chart stand use.

Yes I Can! Yes You Can! Tackle Diabetes and Win!

Jay Leeuwenburg was diagnosed with Type I Diabetes only days after his 12th birthday. From his first day in an unfamiliar Oregon hospital, 2,200 miles from his suburban St. Louis home, Jay’s attitude toward living his life to the fullest was, "Yes I Can!"

He quickly accepted responsibility for managing his disease. Blessed with a combination of competitiveness, intelligence, confidence and athletic ability, he took charge of his diabetes, and thus took charge of his life.

Testing his parents’ patience and his doctors’ knowledge, Jay pushed ahead with every imaginable athletic and competitive interest – even winning a pie-eating contest in high school. "Not participating would have been like saying, ‘Don’t breathe,’ ’’ he says.

He almost lost a foot to infection his senior year in high school, but persevered to become a first-team all-state football player and a qualifier for the state wrestling tournament – in his first and only attempt at the sport.

Recruited by the University of Colorado after other major colleges were scared away by his diabetes, he started at center on Colorado’s national champion team in 1990, then capped his third straight season as a starter by being named first-team center on every All-American team chosen the following year. He played in four bowl games and two national championship games during his career, and was team captain his senior season.

In 2005 Jay was one of 13 players – and the only interior offensive lineman – voted to the Orange Bowl Championship Legends honor squad chosen to recognize the most outstanding players who participated in the 17 Orange Bowl games that decided college football’s national championship.

Despite his unanimous recognition as one of the top linemen in college football, however, National Football League teams passed on him until the Ninth Round of the 1992 college draft. "My goal immediately became to play the number of years in the NFL for the round in which I was drafted," he says. Overcoming the ignorance about diabetes that he found throughout pro football, Jay not only accomplished his goal but also started at every interior line position, a distinction few NFL linemen share.

During a nine-year career that included four seasons with the Chicago Bears, three with the Indianapolis Colts and one each with the Cincinnati Bengals and Washington Redskins, Jay lined up against Hall of Famers Lawrence Taylor and Reggie White; shared a sideline with the immortal Walter Payton; made headlines as one of pro football’s first big-money free agents; and experienced the playoffs as both winner and loser.

Bothered by the absence of diabetic athletes as positive examples during his own childhood, Jay decided that his stardom presented both an opportunity and a responsibility: to become a role model for other diabetics, especially children. While playing for the Indianapolis Colts, he established "Jay’s Corner" and provided game tickets for children with diabetes, their family members and others instrumental in their diabetes management and education

Jay and his wife Ingher produced a life-sized poster of Jay in uniform and filled it with facts about Jay that were intended to educate youngsters with diabetes and motivate them to take responsibility for controlling their disease and living a full life. It was distributed nationwide, and he became the subject of national magazine articles and public television documentaries, and even testified before the United State Congress. He remains an active supporter of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.

His message: "Yes You Can!!" is equally applicable to everyone dealing with diabetes, regardless of age.

"Yes I Can! Yes You Can!!" is filled with entertaining and touching stories that will span the range of every reader’s emotions. For anyone with diabetes, as well as their family members and friends, it delivers a motivating message that this potentially debilitating disease can be managed; can be controlled; can be conquered.

Ask Jay Leeuwenburg if a person with diabetes can enjoy life as completely as anyone without it, and he’ll answer, "Yes I Can! Yes You Can!!"

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