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Wednesday, 15 November 2017

Psoriasis and diabetes type 2. November 15, 2017

People with psoriasis are at a higher risk to develop type 2 diabetes than those without psoriasis, and the risk increases dramatically based on the severity of the disease. Researchers found people with psoriasis that covers 10 percent of their body or more are 64 percent more likely to develop diabetes than those without psoriasis, independent of traditional risk factors such as body weight.
 http://ift.tt/2ij7EWn
I would happy to accept this clam, but there is the problem. So, they took people who already have skin disorder and then they present that these people are in rick to develop diabetes type 2, right? The 'rick' is uncertain. No one today can say would those people be diabetics type 2 or not just because of there is no clear definition what is it, diabetes type 2. If definition would be created,  finally, those people who already  carry this disorder, would be diagnosed with diabetes.  If today people with psoriasis would be tested if they do have diabetes then many of them if not all, would be diagnosed with diabetes. It is so simple. Just run the test, and probably diabetes  is first in line, and psoriasis resulted of diabetes.
     It is really interesting, why all those %%%% published if it is so uncertain, just possibility to develop? Because of authors wish to back up own clam with numbers. Numbers are not lie, right? So, if there are numbers such as 64&% or 10 %  then authors of this hypothesis feel supported by science. There is no science, just speculations. In reality article show the greedy MD who use all the disease they suppose to treat, to increase own income. What is for patients? What authors suggest to patients? what is the conclusion of the article?
  "The type of inflammation seen in psoriasis is known to promote insulin resistance, and psoriasis and diabetes share similar genetic mutations suggesting a biological basis for the connection between the two conditions we found in our study," said the study's senior author Joel M. Gelfand, MD MSCE, a professor of Dermatology and Epidemiology at Penn. 
The ultimate question, What was first, the egg or the chicken?
     I am all the time very curious. Why there are so many studies? Why there are no studies how to dose insulin, or what drug better to take with different severity of diabetes? But there are all the time studies, who is in the risk to develop diabetes type 2? This remain me the gypsy on the street  who will predict future to all whom they stopped. Who really will remember what said in the any of articles who will developed diabetes type 2? No one. So, there is no one evidence to support the clame that the egg was first and only after egg the roster showed up.  


via Ravenvoron

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