Medical Grand Rounds

Endocrinology update 2006

Author and Disclosure Information

ABSTRACTEndocrinology has recently witnessed several important developments:

  • The Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications study, a follow-up to the landmark Diabetes Control and Complications trial, found that strict glucose control early in the course of type 1 diabetes reduces the risk of microvascular and cardiovascular complications and provides prolonged benefits even if intensive control is not so tightly maintained.
  • Inhaled insulin preparations are now available for mealtime coverage.
  • We now have two new injectable medications for diabetes; pramlintide (Symlin) and exenatide (Byetta) are good adjuncts for patients with both type 1 and type 2 diabetes who have trouble reaching their hemoglobin A1c target, and they can help control and even reduce weight.
  • Thyroxine (T4), instead of being merely a "prohormone," has been found to have direct actions on cells, leading to rapid clinical effects and possibly oncogenesis and angiogenesis.
  • The therapeutic range for thyrotropin (TSH) may be much narrower than traditionally believed: some have proposed that the normal range should be redefined as 0.4 to 2.5 mIU/L.
  • New evidence shows that vitamin D is important for more than calcium control and may help prevent type 1 diabetes.


 

Recommended Reading

Changing Phenotype of Type 1 Diabetes Makes Diagnosis Harder
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Researchers Advocate for U.N. Diabetes Resolution
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Focus Groups Reveal Uneasiness With Diabetes Educators' Role
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Guidelines Look at Cardiovascular Care in Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Correction
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Skin Autofluorescence Is Good Mortality Predictor
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Effort Launched to Raise PAD Awareness
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Depression Self-Care May Aid Diabetes Control
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Depression Twice as Common Among Diabetes Patients
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI
Assessing Health Literacy in Veterans with Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes ICYMI