Category Archives: Drugs for Diabetes

FDA Reversal: Rosiglitazone DOES NOT Pose Cardiovascular Risk

Rosiglitazone is a type 2 diabetes drug in the thiazolidinedione class. In 2011, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration determined that rosiglitzone posed a substantial risk for causing premature cardiovascular disease such as heart attacks. The agency greatly restricted prescribers, essentially killing the drug’s sales in the U.S. In November, the FDA took another look at the data and decided the risk was minimal or non-existent.

Dr. Steven Nissen of the Cleveland Clinic is on record as opposing the new change.

A lot of personal injury lawyers will be disappointed in the change unless they’ve already settled their cases out of court.

1 Comment

Filed under Drugs for Diabetes

Carbohydrate Restriction Versus Drugs for T2 Diabetes

“The only person definitely known to have died as a consequence of an association with a low-carbohydrate diet is Dr. Herman Tarnower, author of the Scarsdale diet, although, as they say used to say on the old TV detective shows, the immediate cause of death was lead poisoning. His girlfriend shot him.”

That’s how Richard David Feinman starts a post on management of blood sugars in type 2 diabetics with risky drugs instead of carbohydrate restriction. Of course, you can use both strategies if you have to, and many do.

Read the rest.

Comments Off on Carbohydrate Restriction Versus Drugs for T2 Diabetes

Filed under Drugs for Diabetes

Metformin Impairs Brain Function In Some Users

 

 

Conquer Diabetes and Prediabetes

Metformin is the most-recommended drug for type 2 diabetes

…according to an article at MedPageToday. I consider this finding preliminary, but definitely something to keep an eye on. We need confirmatory data before taking action. Long-term metformin users should get vitamin B12 levels checked periodically in view of the well-established association of low levels in users. Low B12 impairs cognition and is easily preventable or treated.

1 Comment

Filed under Dementia, Drugs for Diabetes, Uncategorized

AAP Publishes First Guidelines for Treatment of Childhood Type 2 Diabetes

The American Academy of Pediatrics has just published the first-ever treatment guidelines for treatment of type 2 diabetes in children and teens under 18.  An excerpt from a pertinent article at MedPageToday:

Most pediatric patients newly diagnosed with type 2 diabetes should receive metformin along with a program of lifestyle modification covering diet and physical activity, according to the guideline, authored by an AAP committee headed by Kenneth Copeland, MD, and Janet Silverstein, MD.

The committee made two exceptions: children and teens presenting with ketosis or diabetic ketoacidosis and “in whom the distinction between types 1 and 2 … is unclear,” and those with blood sugar levels of at least 250 mg/dL or glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) higher than 9%.

Lifestyle modification includes exercising at least an hour a day, and limiting screen time to two hours daily.

Steve Parker, M.D.  

PS: My practice is limited to adults.

 

2 Comments

Filed under Drugs for Diabetes

More on Alogliptin (Nesina), the New Drug for Type 2 Diabetes

Alogliptin isn’t revolutionary.  It’s another DPP-4 inhibitor.  The brand name in the U.S. is Nesina.  Before taking it, review potential risks and benefits with your personal physician and pharmacist.  The following info is from the package insert approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Who’s It For?

Non-pregnant adults with type 2 diabetes not in ketoacidosis.

What’s the Dose?

25 mg by mouth daily; lower for those with kidney impairment.

Important Side Effects?

Most common are stuffy or runny nose, headache, and upper respiratory infection.  It may cause pancreatitis and liver inflammation.  As usual, allergic reactions are possible.  By itself, alogliptin doesn’t cause hypoglycemia.

Can Alogliptin Be Used With Other Diabetes Drugs?

Yes: metformin, pioglitazone, and insulin (probably sulfonylureas, too, but I’m not sure).

Anything Else?

Alogliptin will be available in three forms: 1) alone, 2) combined with metformin, and 3) combined with pioglitazone.

Steve Parker, M.D.

Comments Off on More on Alogliptin (Nesina), the New Drug for Type 2 Diabetes

Filed under Drugs for Diabetes

Hypoglycemia: A Few Causes

Insulin and sulfonylurea drugs are common causes of hypoglycemia

Insulin and sulfonylurea drugs are common causes of hypoglycemia

Low-carbohydrate diets are often so effective at controlling blood sugars that low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) becomes a serious risk for some diabetics. It’s rarely a problem for prediabetics. But people with diabetes using particular drugs could develop life-threatening hypoglycemia, particularly when switching to a reduced-calorie or low-carb style of eating.

CARBOHYDRATES AND BLOOD SUGAR

Never forget that carbohydrate consumption has a major effect on blood sugar (glucose) levels—often causing a rise—in many people with type 2 diabetes and prediabetes. Most folks with diabetes are taking medications to lower their glucose levels.

Remember that the main components of food—called macronutrients—are proteins, fats, and carbohydrates. Common carbohydrate sources are:

■  grains

■  fruits

■  starchy vegetables (e.g., potatoes, corn, peas, beans)

■  milk products

■  candy

■  sweetened beverages

■  other added sugars (e.g., table sugar, high fructose corn syrup, honey)

Low-carb and very-low-carb diets restrict the dieter’s carbohydrate consumption rather dramatically. The standard American diet, for instance, provides 250–300 grams of carbohydrate daily, or 50–60% of total energy (calories). A low-carb diet may provide in the range of 50–130 grams daily, or 10 to 25% of total calories. A very-low-carb diet provides under 50 grams of carb daily (under 10% of all calories), often starting at 20–30 grams. With very-low-carb diets, our bodies must use fats instead of carbohydrates as an energy source, and a result of this fat metabolism is the generation of ketone bodies in the bloodstream. So very-low-carb diets are often called ketogenic diets.

Plenty of carbs in this bread!

Plenty of carbs in this bread!

Many dietitians have been taught that you must eat at least 130 grams of carbohydrate daily to provide a rich, readily available source of energy—glucose, specifically—to your brain in particular, and other tissues. Millions of “low-carbers”—people with a low-carb way of eating—know that isn’t right, having proven it to themselves by experience. I personally lived on 30 grams (or less) daily for four months without problems with my brain or other organs. (Well, my wife might argue about the brain issue.) I felt fine and had plenty of energy.

In healthy people, prediabetics, and mild diabetics not treated with medication, carbohydrate restriction rarely causes low blood sugar problems. But in other diabetics, carbohydrate restriction can lead to serious, even life-threatening, symptoms of hypoglycemia.

DRUGS, DIET, AND HYPOGLYCEMIA

Traditional balanced diets for diabetics typically provide 50 to 60% of all calories as carbohydrates. Low-carb diets, remember, provide 25% or less of calories as carbohydrates. A diabetic trying to lose excess weight with a traditional balanced diet is told also to reduce total calories, which necessarily means lowering carbohydrate grams. So, hypoglycemia is also a potential problem for diabetics on these traditional reduced-calorie diets if they are taking particular diabetic medications.

Hypoglycemia, however, is an even greater risk for diabetics taking certain diabetic drugs while on a low-carb or very-low-carb diet. Serious, even life-threatening, symptoms of hypoglycemia may arise.

For diabetics taking certain diabetic drugs, carbohydrate restriction can lead to serious, even life-threatening, symptoms of hypoglycemia.

I hope I’ve made my point. This is dangerous territory. Review your diabetes drugs to see if they can cause hypoglycemia.

Steve Parker, M.D.

 

1 Comment

Filed under Diabetes Complications, Drugs for Diabetes

The History of Insulin

Banting and Best’s experiments on dogs gave us insulin

Dr. Harriet Hall over at Science-Based Medicine reviews the discovery and purification of insulin, truly a modern medical miracle.  One of the first human users was Elizabeth Hughes.

—Steve

1 Comment

Filed under Drugs for Diabetes

Tired and Easily Fatigued? It Might Be Your Medication

“I’m just over-worked, right?”

Especially if you’re a woman taking a statin drug.

-Steve

Comments Off on Tired and Easily Fatigued? It Might Be Your Medication

Filed under Drugs for Diabetes

Cinnamon for Diabetes? It May Work, But Just Barely

In a meta-analysis…

Cinnamon lowered A1C by 0.09%, versus the usual 1% with medication. [Given that] A1c reflects overall glucose trends, cinnamon doesn’t look that impressive. Even at the extreme of the confidence interval, cinnamon has, at best, 10% of the efficacy of drug treatments. At worst, it’s completely ineffective.

One tasty component of a Cinnabon cinnamon roll

See all the wonky details in a post by pharmacist Scott Gavura at Science-Based Medicine.  I would only add that average changes in blood sugar and hemoglobin A1c in clinical studies don’t necessarily apply to an individual; some folks may respond much  better than others.

Steve Parker, M.D.

 

1 Comment

Filed under Drugs for Diabetes, Supplements

Trouble Seeing? Might Be Your Diabetes Drug

Macular edema is two to five times more common in type 2 diabetics taking pioglitazone or rosiglitazone, according to an article published June 11, 2012, by MedPage Today.  The original research was reported in Archives of Internal Medicine.

The macula is the dark area in the middle of the right half of this retina photo

The macula is the most sensitive part of the retina at the back of your eyeball.  Edema, or watery swelling, of the macula can impair vision.

Very few patients in the U.S. use rosiglitazone any longer because of concerns about heart toxicity.  Pioglitazone has recently been implicated as a cause of bladder cancer.

You can avoid some diabetes drug complications by controlling blood sugars with diet and exercise.

Steve Parker, M.D. 

Reference:
Idris I, et al “Association between thiazolidinedione treatment and risk of macular edema among patients with type 2 diabetes” Arch Intern Med 2012; DOI:10.1001/archinternmed.2012.1938.

2 Comments

Filed under Diabetes Complications, Drugs for Diabetes