Kidney stones tied to higher diabetes risk
REUTERS
Reuters US Online Report Health News
Oct 27, 2011 12:13 EDT
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – People who’ve suffered bouts of kidney stones may have an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes later on, new research suggests.
A number of studies have observed that people with diabetes are more likely to form kidney stones than diabetes-free people are. But it hasn’t been clear whether the reverse is true.
In the new study, researchers found that among more than 94,000 Taiwanese adults, those with a history of kidney stones were about 30 percent more likely to be diagnosed with diabetes over five years than people without stones.
Of over 23,000 people who’d been treated for kidney stones, 12.4 percent developed diabetes, based on medical records. That compared with 9.6 percent of the 70,700 stone-free adults studied for comparison.
Diabetes and kidney stones do share some of the same risk factors — including obesity and older age.
But even when the researchers accounted for age, obesity and certain other health factors, kidney stones were linked to a one-third higher risk of developing diabetes.
The exact reason is uncertain, according to the researchers, led by Dr. Herng-Ching Lin of Taipei Medical University. But they suspect that certain processes in the body may contribute to both kidney stones and diabetes.
Kidney stones develop when the urine contains more crystal-forming substances — including calcium, uric acid and a compound called oxalate — than can be diluted by the available fluid. The stones usually cause no lingering damage, but can be painful to pass.
There’s some evidence to suggest that the blood-sugar-regulating hormone insulin may contribute to kidney stones, according to Lin’s team. Research in animals and humans has hinted that high insulin levels can change the composition of the urine in a way that makes kidney stones more likely to form.
Type 2 diabetes arises when the body loses its sensitivity to insulin, causing levels of the hormone to go up.
The study has limitations, Lin’s team points out — including the fact that it relied on medical records, which are not always accurate. The study also lacked some key information that could help explain why kidney stones and diabetes were connected. That included information on diet, family history and exercise habits.
Still, the researchers say, it’s possible that kidney stones could serve as a red flag that a person has an increased risk of developing diabetes.
And those “stone-formers” might want to pay extra attention to lifestyle changes — like a healthier diet and regular exercise — that could curb their diabetes risk.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/uh1fZI Journal of Urology, November 2011.
Source: Reuters US Online Report Health News
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