The relationship between diabetes and depression appears to
be a bit like a two-way highway, according to researchers at Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine in
Diabetes is the fifth leading cause of death in the
The American Diabetes Association estimates there will be
nearly 50.2 million people with diabetes by 2025, especially that obesity
epidemic continues to spread. Diabetes is a disease in which the body does not
produce or properly use insulin. Insulin is a hormone that is needed to change
sugar, starches, and other food into energy needed for daily life.
Diabetes risk factors include being overweight, sedentary,
persons with a family history of diabetes and women who have babies with a
birth weight of greater than nine pounds.
Type 2 diabetes can further lead to serious complications
such as heart attack, kidney failure, blindness, or nerve damage that can lead
to amputations. Now, according to the new study, diabetes appears to
also lead to depression but the relationship goes both ways.
For the study, Dr. Sherita Hill Golden of Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine and colleagues performed two analyses, both using
information from participants in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis
trial.
The first analysis, involving 5,201 people without type 2
diabetes at the start of the trial, found that treated type 2 diabetes was
associated with a 54 percent increased risk of developing depressive symptoms
over 3.2 years. On the other hand, persons with untreated diabetes were not at
risk of depression.
The study surprisingly found that people with pre-diabetes
or untreated diabetes were 25 percent less likely to experience depressive
symptoms compared to people with normal fasting blood sugar levels.
The second analysis, involving 4,847 participants, looked at
how big was the risk of developing diabetes in depressive people. The
researchers found that elevated depressive symptoms were associated with a 42
percent greater likelihood of developing diabetes during the follow-up period. The
stronger the depressive symptoms, the higher the chance of developing diabetes
was. The risk decreased to 34 percent after adjusting factors like being
overweight, not exercising, and smoking in patients with depression.
The researchers explained the link between depression and
diabetes by the fact that people experiencing depression are more likely to
consume more calories, be less physically active and more likely to smoke. Therefore,
they are more predisposed to diseases such as diabetes.
The new findings add to the growing body of evidence showing
that either depression leads to diabetes or diabetes leads to depression. However,
this is the first study to look at both directions.
Dr. Golden hopes the findings will lead to increased
understanding among both doctors and patients that the two conditions are so
closely intertwined. She further urged doctors that treat diabetes to look for
signs of depression in their patients. Previous studies linked depression with
other serious conditions such as heart disease, stroke, osteoporosis and
perhaps dementia.
The findings were published in the June 18 issue of the journal of the American Medical Association.