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WSU hosts top experts on treatment, prevention of diabetes
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Drs. Gavin (left) and LeRoith (right) are welcomed to WSU by Dr. Crissman
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On
June 7, two of the nation’s top diabetes experts visited the School of Medicine
to deliver lectures on the treatment and prevention of diabetes as part of the
annual Dean’s Distinguished Lecture Series. The speakers,
Derek LeRoith, MD, PhD, chief of the Molecular and Cellular Physiology Section
of the National Institutes of Health’s Clinical Endocrinology Branch, and James
Gavin, MD, PhD, senior scientific officer of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
and former president of the American Diabetes Association, specifically
addressed issues concerning type 2 diabetes. Diabetes is the seventh-leading cause of death in the United States. The annual cost related to the disease is $99 billion. Type 2 diabetes accounts for 90 to 95 percent of the 16 million diagnosed cases in the United States. The condition is especially prevalent in African Americans and Latinos, who are nearly twice as likely to have type 2 diabetes as Non-Hispanic Whites. Dr. LeRoith’s
presentation, entitled “Twin Defects: Insulin Resistance and Insulin
Deficiency,” focused on the combination of pathophysiological problems that
contribute to the onset of type 2 diabetes. While noting that the disease is
inherently genetic, Dr. LeRoith stressed that the effects of type 2 diabetes
can be improved with proper management of environmental conditions, such as
diet and exercise. “We believe that
the defects are genetic; that there are genes that affect the pancreas and
there are genes that affect insulin resistance. Over and above that, there are
environmental factors that make things worse than they should be,” Dr. LeRoith
said. “As you become obese your insulin resistance will get worse. As you lose
weight, or if you do some form of exercise, you can improve your insulin
resistance and, in many patients, beta cell exhaustion can be reversible with
the correct form of management.” Dr. Gavin also
stressed the role that a healthy lifestyle can have on the symptoms of type 2
diabetes in his presentation, “The Future of Diabetes Treatment and
Prevention.” He also stressed the need to diagnose and treat type 2 diabetes in
its earliest stages. “One of the
things we need to be asking ourselves is, who’s at risk? Because if we know
that, and if we act on that, the likelihood is that we will do a better job of
screening people who are in the early stage of the disease--at a point when we
still have some options,” Dr. Gavin said. George
Grunberger, MD, professor and director of WSU’s Center for Molecular Medicine
and Genetics, and professor of internal medicine, who was instrumental in
bringing Drs. LeRoith and Gavin to Detroit, was very pleased with the
presentations as well as the audience, which ranged from diabetes educators and
clinicians to basic science department chairs. “I hope that by the end of the talks, the attendees had a better understanding of the incredible burden, both financially and in human terms, that diabetes represents for our society. I hope they also see the amazing new opportunities to address the disease and are compelled to go back to their classrooms, practices and laboratories to do even more.”
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