New Research on
Chromium and Diabetes
San Diego, CA (June 21, 1999) - Chromium picolinate may be
a useful addition to standard combination drug trea™ent of Type 2, non-insulin
dependent diabetes, suggests a new clinical study presented at the 59th annual
scientific sessions of the American Diabetes Association.
Austrian researchers studied the effects of supplementation with chromium
picolinate (500 mcg, two times a day) for 4 months in 16 obese patients with
a mean age of 56 years. All patients were pretreated with, and continued to
receive stable doses of a sulphonylurea and metformin, standard trea™ents
for Type 2 diabetes, throughout the study.
Babak Bahadori, MD, of the University of Graz in Austria reported that chromium
picolinate appeared to enhance the effects of metformin and oral sulfonylureas.
The addition of chromium was associated with significant reductions in fasting
insulin levels, without a detrimental effect on glucose control. Insulin resistance
assessed by the insulin suppression test was not affected.
"The ability of chromium picolinate to lower fasting insulin levels in
patients already receiving diabetic medications is clinically important because
an elevated insulin level in the blood is an established risk factor for cardiovascular
disease. These findings provide justification for the use of chromium picolinate
as a nutritional adjunct in the dietary management of diabetes," said
Dr. Bahadori.
The positive effects seen in this clinical study could be associated with
an effect of chromium picolinate on insulin clearance, he added.
Additional clinical
research on the "Insulin Assistance Factor"
Speaking at a breakfast symposium, William T. Cefalu, MD,
Associate Professor of Medicine in the Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Unit at the University of Vermont College of Medicine described an improvement
in insulin sensitivity in obese people with pre-diabetic symptoms who received
chromium picolinate. Dr. Cefalu called for additional work to be conducted
in determining chromium picolinate's ability to possibly delay the onset and/or
progression of type 2 diabetes.
In another presentation, Alexander Ravina, MD, of the Diabetes Depar™ent
at the Linn Clinic in Haifa, Israel, presented the results of a study published
in Diabetic Medicine that showed that chromium picolinate reduced or eliminated
the symptoms in 41 out of 44 patients with steroid-induced diabetes after
standard drug therapy failed. The 41 patients who had developed diabetes as
a result of undergoing steroid trea™ent and who benefited from chromium picolinate
were able to reduce or eliminate their diabetic medication, such as insulin.
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