The elevator to success is out of order. You'll have to use the stairs...one step at a time. ~Joe Girard

Spreading Awareness

My purpose in writing this blog is to spread awareness and provide support to parents of children with and without special needs. I have one child with a Learning Disability, more specifically, a Visual Processing Disorder including Dysgraphia and another child with a disease called Eosinophilic Esophagitis, an allergic white blood cell disease that attacks the esophagus.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Inhaled Corticosteroids Linked to Diabetes Risks - What About Our EE Kids?

There are few treatment options for our EE children.  They can either be treated through diet, inhaled or swallowed corticosteroids, or both.  In some cases, these inhaled steroids are the only thing that keeps our children in remission.  They have tried food elimination or elemental diets, but have failed until the inhaled steroids that our children swallow were added to the mix.  Although it doesn't cure them, it may allow them to start trialing foods, or eating foods they were unable to before.  Even though we know there may be side effects, they were not supposed to be as harmful as systemic steroids.  The lesser of two evils, and we want our children to feel better and heal.

So when I stumbled across the article Inhalers Linked to Higher Odds of Diabetes in Asthma, COPD Patients I was less than enthused.  It has long been known that oral systemic corticosteroids such as prednisone can cause diabetes, but this is the first time there has been a link to inhaled steroids, said Samy Suissa, director of the Centre for Clinical Epidemiology at the Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research of the Jewish General Hospital. 


In a study of nearly 400,000 people in Quebec, the researchers found that inhaler use was associated with a 34% increase of new diabetes diagnosis and diabetes progression.  The study observed that 30,000 of their patients developed diabetes over 5 and 1/2 years of treatment, and patients that already had diabetes experienced a worsening of their disease. Samy Suissa reports their findings in the most recent issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.  Based on their results, researchers from McGill University and the Lady Davis Research Institute at Jewish General Hospital in Montreal suggest patients should only be treated when there is a clear benefit.  What other choice do our children have?  Does the risk outweigh the benefit?  It seems that we are running the risk of adding just another diagnosis to our already multiple diagnosed children.  But again, I ask, what are the options?

At least in the report Dr. Weiss, who is also a clinical assistant professor at the NYU School of Medicine in New York City suggests that the concern should also be directed at the person's lifestyle, eating habits and other underlying causes of diabetes.  He concedes,  "Yes, we do know that steroids increase insulin resistance and that people treated with steroids require more aggressive diabetes management.  But if we don't generally take an approach that deals with the poor quality of food that people are routinely consuming, the incidence of both these diseases will continue to go up at a dramatic rate."

Does that make me feel better?  Not so sure.  My wish, as I'm sure is yours, is for one of these doctors/scientists to come up with a cure for our children so they don't have to take all this medication everyday, and they would enjoy a life WITH food and WITHOUT pain.

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