You At Your Best

November 2019 • Diabetes

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Each year, more than a million Americans are diagnosed with diabetes. And though the condition can largely be managed through proper diet, exercise and medication, many individuals with diabetes will develop serious health complications during their lives. That's why diabetes screenings are so important. With early detection, most individuals can make the lifestyle changes necessary to avoid developing the disease. "Often patients who have prediabetes aren't even experiencing symptoms," said Dr. Cesar Hurtado, board-certified family medicine physician at Northwest Medical Plaza - Eastside. "If we can test at-risk patients and catch the condition early, we can often help them avoid diabetes and associated health problems, such as diabetes retinopathy, kidney disease and heart disease." Diabetes is a metabolic disease in which the body's inability to produce any or enough insulin causes elevated levels of glucose, or sugar, in the blood. Individuals with pre-diabetes have blood sugar levels that are higher than normal but not high enough to be classified as full-blown diabetes. According to the American Diabetes Association, 86 million Americans aged 20 and older had prediabetes in 2015 and more than 29 million Americans had diabetes. In the past, physicians tested for diabetes and prediabetes by administering a glucose tolerance test, which required patients to fast for several hours before having blood drawn for a lab test. The test would give patients a score, with those scoring higher than 100 considered prediabetic and those scoring 126 or higher considered diabetic. Recently, physicians have begun favoring a different method of diabetes testing, called the A1C test. This test can provide a more accurate assessment by measuring the average level of glucose in the blood over the previous two to three months. An A1C level of 5.6 or is considered normal, 5.7 is considered pre- diabetes and 6.5 or higher is considered diabetic. "We recommend individuals who are at elevated risk for diabetes, particularly those with a family history, be tested annually," said Hurtado. Although genetics can contribute to the risk of developing diabetes, individuals who are overweight, physically inactive, have high blood pressure, certain racial heritage (African- American, Latino, Native American, Asian-American and Pacific Islander) and a history of gestational diabetes are among those at increased risk. Individuals who are concerned about their diabetes risk, or who have been diagnosed with the disease, should see their primary care physician, Hurtado recommends. By working closely with their physician, the condition can be managed or even prevented. If you need assistance finding a Northwest Health doctor, call 800-734- 2024 or visit NorthwestHealth.com. Screenings critical to diabetes prevention November is Diabetes Awareness Month SPoNSor coNTeNT Adam maass, m.D. Adam Maass, M.D., an endocrinologist who has servied patients in Northwest Arkansas sine 2004 joins Northwest Health on November 1. He and affiliated Nurse Practitioner Melanie Sutton will be seeing patients at Northwest Medical Plaza – Springdale. Dr. Maass is board-certified in endocrinology. He has served as an adjunct clinical professor at University of Arkansas for Medicine Sciences since 2006. He earned his medical degree from Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science then completed a residency in internal medicine at University of Colorado School of Medicine. He completed a fellowship in endocrinology and metabolism at University of Indiana School of Medicine. Dr. Maass is a member of the Board of the Arkansas Chapter of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. Ms. Sutton is a Nurse Practitioner specializing in endocrinology who has been seeing patients in Northwest Arkansas since 2007. She earned her bachelor's degree in nursing from Wichita State University and both her master's degree in nursing and her doctorate of nursing practice from University of Missouri-Kansas City. She served in the United States Army Reserve from 1986-2010, retiring as a Major from the Army Nurse Corp. Endocrinologist Dr. Adam Maass and Nurse Practitioner Melanie Sutton join Northwest Health 4 | YOU AT YOUR BEST | nwAdg.cOm/YOUATYOURBEST nOvEmBER - ThE diABETES iSSUE | SATURdAY, OcTOBER 26, 2019

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