Selasa, 08 Juni 2010

Is any good fat that helping you from diabetes disease


It's Real that body fat turns out there is beneficial for reducing diabetes attack

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Helathytips - Which accumulate in body fat is often considered as the destroyer appearance. But, you know, not all fat is dangerous? According to research in the UK, which raises the fat on the hips and buttocks can protect the body from various diseases attack. Harvard Medical School researchers believe, the person who has a pear-shape body with large hips and buttocks tend to be less exposed to attack diseases like diabetes, heart attack dans. While the fat which accumulates in the abdomen susceptible to chronic diseases such attacks.

Dr. Ronald Kahn, as the leader of the research revealed, deposition of fat in the hips and buttocks only gathered under the skin, it can help improve insulin sensitivity to the hormone that functions regulate blood sugar levels. Because it was the owner of a pear body less frequently attacked by the disease diabetes. "Fat is buried in the skin tissue can give a good effect for our health," said the doctor.

Dr. Ronald said that this result shows that not all fats are bad but there are also fats that can reduce the attack of diabetes. this is not true. Being overweight or obese raises the risk of becoming diabetic, they are risk factors, but do not mean that an obese person will definitely become diabetic. Many people with type 2 diabetes, where the body does not produce enough insulin for proper function, or the cells in the body do not react to insulin (insulin resistance) is never been overweight. The majority of overweight people do not develop this type 2 diabetes.

A person with diabetes has a condition in which the quantity of glucose in the blood is too elevated (hyperglycemia). This is because the body either does not produce enough insulin, produces no insulin, or has cells that do not respond properly to the insulin the pancreas produces. This results in too much glucose building up in the blood. This excess blood glucose eventually passes out of the body in urine. So, even though the blood has plenty of glucose, the cells are not getting it for their essential energy and growth requirements.

Being overweight, physically inactive and eating the wrong foods all contribute to our risk of developing type 2 diabetes. Drinking just one can of (non-diet) soda per day can raise our risk of developing type 2 diabetes by 22%, researchers from Imperial College London reported in the journal Diabetologia. The scientists believe that the impact of sugary soft drinks on diabetes risk may be a direct one, rather than simply an influence on body weight.



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