New Horizons in Diabetology
نویسندگان
چکیده
The prevalence of diabetes has alarmingly increased in both developed and developing countries all across the world in the recent years. The prevalence of different complications and comorbid conditions associated with diabetes is also rampantly increasing, thereby negatively affecting lives of many people. In fact, obesity which is associated with diabetes is considered as a major public health concern in many countries. Nevertheless, it can be argued that still more progress is to be made in different fields of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of diabetes. This gap in the science of Diabetology, arguably, stems from insufficient synchronized interdisciplinary basic and clinical research in the field. This deficiency may be addressed through finding the gaps in the published literature by means of plotting different diabetes maps and focusing research on them to promote the concept of translational medicine. Lack of comprehensive diabetes research maps and the scarcity of the literature in the related interdisciplinary fields can be considered as major hindrance to the future advancement of the science of Diabetology. With this view, we conceived the concept of publication of a special issue on the subject and invited authors to submit any original research or review paper with the potential of opening new horizons to prevention, screening, and treatment of diabetes. Out of approximately 50 manuscripts submitted, in this special issue, 15 articles have been approved by reviewers to be published on a wide range of relevant basic and clinical subjects. In the field of screening for diabetes, findings of a study by S. M. Joyce-Tan et al. demonstrated that genetic variants of the RAS can modestly influence the risk of type 2 diabetes. P. Haghvirdizadeh et al., in a different study, reported that R219K polymorphism of ABCA1 gene could be considered as a genetic risk factor for type 2 diabetes among certain populations. In another article, M. Khodaeian et al. assert that genome wide association studies on large number of samples can be helpful in the identification of diabetes susceptible genes and may be used as an alternative to studying individual candidate genes which is a time-consuming and expensive method. In a different article, P. Haghvirdizadeh et al. findings provide evidence for the contribution of common KCNJ11 genetic variants to the development of DM. In regard to the underlying mechanisms of diabetes and its complications, M. Káplár et al., in an original research article , demonstrated a dual role for …
منابع مشابه
False Dawns and New Horizons in Patient Safety Research and Practice
In response to a weight of evidence that patients are frequently harmed as a result of their care, there have been concerted efforts to make healthcare safer, with health systems across the globe investing significant resources in policies and programmes designed to reduce adverse events. Yet, despite extensive efforts, improvements in safety have proved difficult to sustain and spread, with st...
متن کاملFood choices during Ramadan
Few studies have assessed the dietary Practices of people with diabetes during Ramadan (1). A sub study of Ramadan prospective diabetes study (2) which was conducted at the outpatient department of Baqai Institute of Diabetology and endocrinology, Karachi Pakistan in 2009 analyzed the food choices of patients with diabetes during Ramadan. Several irregularities regarding dietary intake and food...
متن کاملIt Ain’t What You Do (But the Way That You Do It): Will Safety II Transform the Way We Do Patient Safety; Comment on “False Dawns and New Horizons in Patient Safety Research and Practice”
Mannion and Braithwaite outline a new paradigm for studying and improving patient safety – Safety II. In this response, I argue that Safety I should not be dismissed simply because the safety management strategies that are developed and enacted in the name of Safety I are not always true to the original philosophy of ‘systems thinking.’
متن کاملExposure to Mobile Phone Radiation Opens New Horizons in Alzheimer’s Disease Treatment
Alzheimer’s disease, the most common type of dementia and a progressive neurode-generative disease, occurs when the nerve cells in the brain die. Although there are medications that can help delay the development of Alzheimer’s disease, there is cur-rently no cure for this disease. Exposure to ionizing and non-ionizing radiation may cause adverse health effects such as cancer. Looking at th...
متن کاملA Safety-II Perspective on Organisational Learning in Healthcare Organisations; Comment on “False Dawns and New Horizons in Patient Safety Research and Practice”
In their recent editorial Mannion and Braithwaite provide an insightful critique of traditional patient safety improvement efforts, and offer a powerful alternative vision based on Safety-II thinking that has the potential to radically transform the way we approach patient safety. In this commentary, I explore how the Safety-II perspective points to new directions for organisational learning in...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 2016 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2016