More News

t

New research underlines the importance of maintaining a healthy weight, avoiding abdominal fat, eating a healthy diet and engaging in regular physical activity, according to lead author Dr. Geoffrey Kabat (PhD), a senior epidemiologist in the department of epidemiology and population health at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.

“By doing these things, one is doing the best one can do to avoid insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes and heart disease, and possibly certain cancers, including breast and colorectal,” said Dr. Kabat in an e-mail interview.

Baseline glucose was positively associated with colorectal risk; the hazard ratio for the highest tertile (≥ 99.5 mg/dl, or 5.53 mmol/l) versus the lowest tertile (< 89.5 mg/dl, or 4.97 mmol/l) was 1.74. When the analysis was restricted to cases of colon cancer, the hazard ratio for the highest versus lowest baseline glucose levels was 2.25. Findings were published online Nov. 29, 2011, in the British Journal of Cancer.

New research suggests the Lap-Band operation has a high complication rates. Watch the full CTV News story.

CLINIC POSITIONS AVAILABLE:

Check out our Employment Section.

Nursing Professionals and Medical Receptionists

Dr.Bernstein Media Centre.

Featuring real stories about how we have helped to change the lives of 2 of our patients. We are sure you will find them inspiring. Please feel free to pass this on and share them with someone you know who might be interested in these videos.

YouTube - Meet Christina, who lost 196 lbs in 14 months and kept it off since 2008.

YouTube - Meet Mike, who lost 78 lbs in 4 ½ months and kept it off since 2004.

Dr. Bernstein Diet & Health Clinics have been helping people reach their weight loss goals for over 35 years. You can safely lose up to 20 lbs. each month and learn to keep it off for good – without diet pills, surgery or exercise.

Yes, you can.

Now allowed on the diet

Liquids

  • Pacific Organic Beef broth, Chicken broth low sodium, Mushroom Broth, Vegetable Broth

Breads

  • Certain Gluten free products

Protein

  • Pork tenderloin
  • Some Schneider’s Fat Free (Lifestyle) Deli Slices

Vegetable

  • Artichokes
  • Hearts of Palm
  • Wax beans

Fruits

  • Blackberries
  • Blueberries
  • Clementine
  • Nectarine
  • Raspberries
  • Tangerine

Click here for a printable version

FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 2010 * TORONTO STAR *

SPECIAL REPORT ON OBESITY

BY:VIVIAN SONG SPECIAL TO THE STAR

Two-thirds of patients with sleep apnea are also obese, greatly increasing their risk of developing Type 2 diabetes

Ruth Simpson has been a slave to constant and excessive fatigue most of her life.

Nagging exhaustion prevents her from accepting social invitations and the retired
Scarborough teacher is in bed by 7p.m. most nights.

The older she got, the more illogically extreme her fatigue became. As a young
girl, she was always a snorer. But as time wore on, Simpson, now 60, was waking
up with sore throats and tension between her ribs, making more bathroom trips
throughout the night and was putting on a lot of weight.

She was diagnosed with Obstructive Sleep Apnea, a disorder characterized by
frequent episodes of blocked breathing.

Ather doctor’s appointment, Simpson was also waned of the links between sleep
apnea and cardiovascular problems or diabetes.

A year later, in 2001, Simpson went back to the doctor, as her exhaustion had
become worse. She was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes.

“It all played havoc with my health,” she says ‘I feel like I wasted 10 years of my
life because of fatigue.’

A growing body of research is finding links be­tween sleep deprivation or sleep
disorders and Type 2 diabetes. It’s a connection that receives little attention
when it comes to the management of the disease.

‘Weknow that sleep is helpful to our bodies.  We talk about it as a way of providing nutritional support to the body,” says Dr. Harvey Moldofsky, medical director of the Sleep Disorders Clinic and Centre for Sleep and Chronobiology in Toronto. ‘The regulatory functions of our body are all tied to the sleep/wake cycle. When sleep is disturbed, our immune system weakens and our hormones are thrown off.”

Chief among these hormones are those that govern what Moldofsky calls “the appetite
of our behavior,” or food cravings. These metabolic changes increase our desire
to eat, which in turn leads to obesity: the leading risk factor for diabetes.

It’s all interconnected, experts say, and at the core of the problem is North
America’s increasingly obese population.

“Two-thirds of patients with sleep apnea are obese,” says Dr. Michael Farkouh, a Canadian cardiologist and associate professor of the Mount Sinai Medical Center in New
York “Obesity is a greater predictor of sleep apnea than age by four times. And obesity is a risk factor for diabetes. They all march together.”

For Simpson, not only is everything tied together, her life is a vicious cycle of
exhaustion and weight gain.

During her sleep test, doctors found that Simpson stopped breathing for 30 seconds,
every 90 seconds

In sleep apnea, the muscles in the upper throat relax during sleep, closing the
airway and preventing air from getting into the lungs.  She would wake up 70 times through out the night but was unaware of the interruptions in the morning. Her oxygen blood
saturation levels were also dangerously low.

This lack of oxygen and sleep animates the sympathetic nervous system, which
secretes adrenalin into the blood stream. That reduces the ability of insulin
— whose job it is to regulate blood sugar levels — to help cells in the body
absorb glucose, making the patient both insulin resistant and glucose
intolerant, explains Dr. Douglas Bradley senior investigator and director of
the Sleep Research Laboratory at Toronto Rehab.

‘There is a significant relationship between sleep apnea and actual Type 2 diabetes,”
Bradley says.

When Simpson  was working as a special education teacher in Scar­borough, she would spend her lunch hours napping, and slept through all her weekends.

‘I slept in order to work,” Simpson, 60, says. ‘When I got home, I would fix dinner and be in bed by 7 or 8 p.m. Friends knew never to call me after 9 p.m. and dinner out with friends had to be early?’

She noticed that her neck got larger and she was putting on extra weight: over the
span of 10 years, she gained 90 pounds on her 5-foot frame.

“When your body’s not well, you don’t have the energy to exercise,” she says. “I started gradually putting on the weight and couldn’t get it off.”

While the link between sleep apnea and diabetes is well-established, new research is
also emerging about the role of sleep deprivation in diabetes.

In a study out of Columbia University re­searchers followed 8,992 subjects between
the ages of 32 and 86 in an epidemiological study that spanned 10 years.

They found that those who slept five or fewer hours, as well as those who slept more
than nine, were significantly more likely to develop Type 2 diabetes, compared to those who reported sleeping seven hours — even after adjusting for variables like obesity, physical activity, age and ethnicity.  Experts advise getting seven to eight hours of
sleep a night.  

But if sleep apnea is linked to poor glucose control, logic dictates that treating
the sleep disorder has the potential to also manage diabetes, an exciting
prospect for researchers and patients alike.

“By following behavioral modifications like weight loss and better management of
sleep apnea, there’s an opportunity to turn this around and improve the way
patients feel,” Farkouh says

JUST THE FACTS

While there’s more research to be done, experts say the importance of adequate and
quality sleep is often overlooked in the management of diabetes and should be
given its due, alongside nutrition and exercise. The International Diabetes
Federation offers these facts:

• Up to 40 per cent of people with Obstructive Sleep Apnea will have diabetes,
but the incidence of new diabetes in people with OSA is not known.

• The prevalence of OSA in diabetics may be 23 per cent, while the prevalence of
some form of sleep-disordered breathing may be 58 per cent.

• Studies show an association between the two conditions independent of obesity.

Yes, you did!

Congratulations! You’ve lost the weight and you feel great. So why not share your success and words of encouragement with others who are thinking about losing the weight and regaining their health? You could be the inspiration to help others take the first step towards changing their lives.

That’s why we have created the “Share Your Story” page (under Success Stories in the main menu) so our patients can submit their experiences on the diet to us. You can write us a letter or even choose to upload before and after photos that showcase your success! (All letters and photos that are chosen for posting will only display the patient’s initials and city.)

And if we find your story and photos especially interesting and motivating, you could be selected as a “Dr. Bernstein Poster Patient” – if you agree to possible use in advertising, we will refund your fees for our services and give you a year on our Maintenance Program free (conditions apply).

So send us your story and help motivate others today!

Our patients are our best spokespeople so we want to thank you for your trust and loyalty. We will give you 2 free weeks of service for every new patient you refer to us who starts the program!

(Some details and conditions apply.)

To learn more, call 1.888.DR.B.DIET (1-888-372-3438)