Women who have diabetes before getting pregnant are three to four times more likely to have a baby with birth defects, a new study suggests. Researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked at 13,000 birth records of children born with birth defects. They found nearly 40 types of defects that were more common in women who were diabetic, including heart defects, missing kidneys, or spine deformities.
Read moreType 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition in which your body's own antibodies, for some unknown reason, attack your beta cells, destroying... Read more »
This past week, the Wall Street Journal reported that the FDA is investigating the stability of pumps for diabetes management. The concern... Read more »
Type 2 diabetes starts because you gain weight, the weight gain causes insulin resistance (IR), and the IR causes the diabetes, right? ... Read more »
Like hypos last week, insulin is in the news. Considering that nothing is better at causing hypos than insulin is, they are connected in... Read more »
Did you know that being mentally/physically stressed can have a huge impact on your blood sugars and your insulin sensitivity? I had a... Read more »
The epilepsy and migraine drug Topamax appears to increase the risk for oral birth defects in women taking the medication, a new study has found. The... Read more »
Acetaminophen does not appear to increase the risk of birth defects, researchers say. For their study, the scientists reviewed data from a large U.S.... Read more »
This is a study to compare the effectiveness of biphasic insulin aspart 70/30 versus insulin glargine in patients with Type 2 diabetes. This national... Read more »
A new study found that 20 out of 23 Type 1 diabetics who were given stem cell transplants did not need to take insulin for two to four years. The... Read more »
This is a study to compare the safety and effectiveness of a combination of prandial inhaled insulin and metformin with the inhaled insulin and a... Read more »