Diabetes moving from elderly to children
Symptoms include increased thirst, frequent urination, extreme hunger, weight loss, blurred vision or...
ISLAMABAD:
Diabetes is something your grandmother gets, not your child, right? Wrong. Experts are alarmed that more and more Pakistani children are showing up at their clinics with an inability to produce insulin, the bodily chemical that helps you process calories.
People with type 1 diabetes, who do not make insulin, can become very ill without insulin shots.
A small unit at the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences in Islamabad (PIMS) is treating children with juvenile diabetes. “The first case we received was in 2008 and today 350 small children are under our supervision,” said PIMS head of paediatrics Dr Gulbin. “The numbers are increasing rapidly.” Lahore-based child specialist Dr Hamayun Iqbal is also worried.
“Because of a lack of proper statistics we are unaware of the exact numbers of children who are suffering diabetes in the country,” he said.
Dr Gulbin of PIMS said that they had even heard reports that children in villages around Rawalpindi and Islamabad had died simply because their parents were clueless about the secret condition.
“Poor parents who come from villages far away from city centres have a difficult time managing the treatment because the price of insulin is high,” she said. At least three pharmaceutical brands supply insulin and the cost is about Rs500 for 100 units.
Some of the symptoms that can alert parents are increased thirst and frequent urination, extreme hunger, weight loss, blurred vision or fatigue.
Dr Iqbal said that it is not completely clear what causes type 1 diabetes. But scientists do know that in such people the body’s immune system that normally fights harmful bacteria and viruses mistakenly destroys the insulin-producing (islet) cells in the pancreas.
“Genetics may play a role,” he added, “as can exposure to certain viruses.”
Given that parents aren’t mostly aware of the condition, schools can help spread information.
Watch your mouth
A 2009 study by experts by the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm and the Altamash Institute of Dental Medicine, Karachi, found that diabetes has had a strongly negative influence on oral health: diabetic patients have fewer teeth, more plaque, and a higher prevalence of moderate to severe periodontal disease than non-diabetics.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 15th, 2010.
Diabetes is something your grandmother gets, not your child, right? Wrong. Experts are alarmed that more and more Pakistani children are showing up at their clinics with an inability to produce insulin, the bodily chemical that helps you process calories.
People with type 1 diabetes, who do not make insulin, can become very ill without insulin shots.
A small unit at the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences in Islamabad (PIMS) is treating children with juvenile diabetes. “The first case we received was in 2008 and today 350 small children are under our supervision,” said PIMS head of paediatrics Dr Gulbin. “The numbers are increasing rapidly.” Lahore-based child specialist Dr Hamayun Iqbal is also worried.
“Because of a lack of proper statistics we are unaware of the exact numbers of children who are suffering diabetes in the country,” he said.
Dr Gulbin of PIMS said that they had even heard reports that children in villages around Rawalpindi and Islamabad had died simply because their parents were clueless about the secret condition.
“Poor parents who come from villages far away from city centres have a difficult time managing the treatment because the price of insulin is high,” she said. At least three pharmaceutical brands supply insulin and the cost is about Rs500 for 100 units.
Some of the symptoms that can alert parents are increased thirst and frequent urination, extreme hunger, weight loss, blurred vision or fatigue.
Dr Iqbal said that it is not completely clear what causes type 1 diabetes. But scientists do know that in such people the body’s immune system that normally fights harmful bacteria and viruses mistakenly destroys the insulin-producing (islet) cells in the pancreas.
“Genetics may play a role,” he added, “as can exposure to certain viruses.”
Given that parents aren’t mostly aware of the condition, schools can help spread information.
Watch your mouth
A 2009 study by experts by the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm and the Altamash Institute of Dental Medicine, Karachi, found that diabetes has had a strongly negative influence on oral health: diabetic patients have fewer teeth, more plaque, and a higher prevalence of moderate to severe periodontal disease than non-diabetics.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 15th, 2010.