Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Many people with cystic fibrosis develop diabetes. The reasons for this have been largely unknown, but now researchers at Lund University in Sweden and Karolinska institutet have identified a molecular mechanism that contributes to the raised diabetes risk.
“The increased risk of diabetes has previously been explained by the fact that cystic fibrosis causes damage to the pancreas, where the blood-sugar regulating hormone insulin is produced. We are the first research group to show that the mutated gene that causes cystic fibrosis also plays an important role in the release of insulin. The risk of diabetes is not only explained by the destruction of the pancreas”, said Anna Edlund, a doctoral student at Lund University Diabetes Centre.
http://www.healthcanal.com/metaboli...tic-fibrosis-and-diabetes-link-explained.html
“The increased risk of diabetes has previously been explained by the fact that cystic fibrosis causes damage to the pancreas, where the blood-sugar regulating hormone insulin is produced. We are the first research group to show that the mutated gene that causes cystic fibrosis also plays an important role in the release of insulin. The risk of diabetes is not only explained by the destruction of the pancreas”, said Anna Edlund, a doctoral student at Lund University Diabetes Centre.
http://www.healthcanal.com/metaboli...tic-fibrosis-and-diabetes-link-explained.html