By Chioma
Umeha
Common belief that diabetes is a condition caused by excessive consumption of sugar or certain types of foods were dismissed by scientists who spoke at an event to observe the World Diabetes Day (WDD) on Tuesday.
Common belief that diabetes is a condition caused by excessive consumption of sugar or certain types of foods were dismissed by scientists who spoke at an event to observe the World Diabetes Day (WDD) on Tuesday.
The scientists made the clarifications at a capacity building
workshop on Diabetes with the theme “Equipping Present-day Journalists for
Effective Reporting of Diabetes.”
They insisted that “it is not sugar or foods that cause
diabetes,’’ at the event which was organised for Health Journalist in Lagos by Sanofi, a global healthcare firm to herald
this year’s WDD.
Diabetes, often referred to by doctors as Diabetes Mellitus,
describes a group of metabolic diseases in which the person has high blood
glucose (blood sugar), either because insulin production is inadequate, or
because the body’s cells do not respond properly to insulin, or both.
Patients with high blood sugar will typically experience
polyuria (frequent urination), they will become increasingly thirsty
(polydipsia) and hungry (polyphagia).
One
of the scientists, Dr. Ifedayo Odeniyi, an Endocrinologist and a
Senior Lecturer at the Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, University
of Lagos, explains that diabetes is a problem with the body’s handling of
glucose.
Odeniyi
said; “Most people believe that when you have diabetes, it is because you eat
too much sugar, this is not correct.
“Diabetes
is not as a result of consuming sugar or sugary things, but rather, it is as a
result of the body’s inability to handle glucose in the body.
“The
glucose comes from all the food we eat whether it is meat, carbohydrate,
protein or fat; so, in their normal forms, the body does not recognise them.
“The
only thing the body recognises is glucose as a source of energy; when eat
`eba’, `fufu’ foods prepared from cassava, rice and others, the body
changes them to glucose,’’ the Endocrinologist said.
Odeniyi
added: “The body needs glucose for energy for us to move around, eyes to see,
brain to function and for every part of the body to function well. “However,
before the body can make use of this glucose, one hormone is very important and
that is insulin.
“After
we have eaten and glucose is in the system, the pancreas produces insulin,
(which lies on body cells), when the body senses there is glucose in the system.
“When
it does that, the channel is opened for the insulin to go into the body cell
for them to be broken down into energy, carbon dioxide and water. So, insulin
can be likened to be the key that opens the door for the glucose to go in.
“Some
people’s body may not be producing insulin at all, as in those that have Type 1
diabetes.’’
The
Senior Lecturer noted that some people might be producing insulin
but it is either it was not enough or was not working well enough to allow the
glucose to be absorbed into the blood stream.
“This
is what happens in those that have Type 2 diabetes, so, it is not the food that
is causing diabetes,’’ he explained.
Odeniyi,
who is also an Honorary Consultant Endocinologist at the Lagos University
Teaching Hospital (LUTH), also said that it is erroneous to believe
that someone with diabetes must be on a special diet.
“There
is no special diet for diabetes and there is nothing like diabetic diet.
“We
hear that the diet for people with diabetes should be beans, unripe plantain
and wheat.
“Diabetic
patients can eat everything; the only thing that should change is the quantity
of which must be regulated.
“There
are so many diets but none specific for diabetes; in which ever environment one
is, use the food that is culturally accepted to the patient to manage the
person.
“So,
as long you can control the calories, a patient can eat any type of food,’’
Odeniyi said.
Making
his remarks, Mr. Oladimeji Agbolade, Head, External Affairs, Sanofi, said that
diabetes had become a global pandemic.
As at
2015, it is estimated that 415 million adults have diabetes and it is expected
to rise to 642 million by 2040, Agbolade said.
According
to him, managing the disease was tedious and time-consuming, but required
effective management which would include taking extra care around food and
exercise, as well as monitoring of blood levels throughout the day.
Agbolade
called on the Federal Government to make a policy that would ensure that
Nigerians were compulsorily tested for diabetes anytime they went to a hospital.
The
most common types of diabetes Type 1, a chronic condition in which the pancreas
produces little or no insulin, Type 2, a chronic condition that affects the way
the body processes blood sugar (glucose).
Others
are Prediabetes in which blood sugar is high, but not high enough to be type 2
diabetes and Gestational diabetes, a form of high blood sugar affecting
pregnant women.
The
World Diabetes Day is marked annually on November 14 and the theme for 2017 is
“Women and Diabetes – Our Right to a Healthy Future.’’