The information about the relationship between type 2 diabetes and Alzheimer's are increasingly overwhelming.It is already talked openly in many forums of type 3 diabetes as the one that not only suffers from the relatives of people with diabetes, but the one that ends up causing a degeneration of the brain.Today more than ever it is necessary to become aware of the control and management of high sugar levels.

The World Current Magazine Time publishes this month a wide report in which it ensures that high blood sugar levels in people with type 2 diabetes can not only harm the heart and kidneys as target organs but also can damage the brainIn two different ways.According to the latest research at the University of Pennsylvania and published in the scientific journal Radiology, people with acute type 2 diabetes have less brain tissue than the rest.

The scientists led by Dr. R. Nick Bryan from the University of Pennsylvania found that patients with prolonged type 2 diabetes and high sugar levels had less brain tissue, according to the evaluation of magnetic resonance images of their brainsWith mild ways of type 2 diabetes.

Patients diagnosed for 15 years or more had less gray matter than those who had been diagnosed four years ago.And for every 10 years that a person has diabetes, the brain ages two years more than that of similar people without the disease.

While the previous studies implied that diabetes was linked to the degeneration of the brain, experts believed that atrophy was mainly related to the reduction of blood flow to the brain.But when examining the 614 people in the study, Bryan and his team discovered another form of brain damage.Normally, human beings lose approximately 1.5 cc at 2 cc of brain volume in a year.Bryan and his team confirmed that people with type 2 diabetes and high sugar levels can lose approximately double.

It is not clear how diabetes contributes to this additional assault on brain tissue, but it is possible that high sugar levels could lead to the formation of more free radicals, which increases inflammation, accelerating the disappearance of major brain cells.

What is especially worrying is that this brain loss can be an independent collaborator for Alzheimer's disease in person with type 2 diabetes. Studies have documented the greatest risk of Alzheimer's disease in people with type 2 diabetes.

The results also suggest that younger patients who are diagnosed with diabetes may be facing cognitive decline faster than their non -diabetic pairs."These results suggest that the adverse effects of high sugar levels probably begin quite early on the disease," says Bryan."They can be subtle, but it's likely to start early."

For that reason, now more than ever, the taking of measures to keep the high levels of sugar become key.A good nutrition, the practice of sport continuously and a healthy lifestyle can prevent silent disease from ending up being very striking in our brain.