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Low-Dose Insulin Doesn't Affect Kids' Growth
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Data from a diabetes prevention
trial show that low-dose insulin treatment has no apparent
effect on body weight or physical development in adolescents
and children who are at increased risk of developing diabetes
type 1.
"The role of insulin in body weight regulation
has been the subject of much debate," senior investigator
Dr. David S. Ludwig told Reuters Health. "Some experts
argue that insulin acts in the brain to decrease hunger and
food intake. Others propose that insulin acts in the periphery
to promote fat deposition."
To look into this question further, Ludwig
of Children's Hospital Boston and colleagues analyzed data
from a trial of low-dose insulin aimed at preventing the development
of type 1 diabetes in those at risk.
As reported in the medical journal Diabetes
Care, the team focused on 55 young subjects who underwent
insulin therapy and 45 who were just closely monitored. At
the start of the study, the participants ranged in age from
4 to almost 19 years.
Over the course of two years, there were no
differences between the groups in physical development. In
particular, there were no differences in average weight, body
mass index or height between children on low-dose insulin
and those who were untreated.
Ludwig concluded: "The results of our
study indicate that insulin at low doses in children causes
neither weight gain nor weight loss, possibly because central
and peripheral actions are closely counter- balanced."
He added that further research is needed "to
determine whether insulin, or agents that block insulin action,
could play a role in body weight management."
SOURCE:
Diabetes Care, 2006.
2006 Reuters
Health
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