Chromium
May Reduce Diabetes Risk
NEW YORK, NY, 6/27/97- A new study presented
at the 57th Annual Scientific Session of the American Diabetes
Association Meeting in Boston, MA, on June 23 demonstrates
that daily supplementation with 1,000 micrograms of chromium
picolinate significantly enhanced the action of insulin.
The study enrolled moderately obese people with a high risk
of developing type II (adult-onset) diabetes.
The study was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
clinical trial directed by William Cefalu, M.D., Director
of the Diabetes Comprehensive Care and Research Program
at Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Wake Forest University.
The study enrolled 29 overweight individuals with a family
history of diabetes. The patients received either a placebo
or 1,000 micrograms (1 mg) of chromium per day.
After four months of trea™ent, insulin resistance among
chromium recipients was reduced a statistically significant
40%. This improvement was maintained at the end of eight
months, Cefalu reported.
The researchers also evaluated the patients' abdominal body
fat before and after trea™ent using a sophisticated imaging
technique. The placebo group showed a gain of six percent,
compared with a gain of one percent in the chromium group.
This difference was not statistically significant.
"Even though only a small number of subjects were studied
, the improvement in insulin sensitivity in chromium-supplemented
subjects was quite significant and impressive," noted
Dr. Cefalu. "This is a potentially important finding
in light of the fact that insulin resistance often precedes
type II diabetes. Chromium picolinate is a nutritional supplement
that can reduce risk factors for the development of diabetes."
Richard Anderson, Ph.D., Senior Scientist at the USDA's
Human Nutrition Laboratory in Beltsville, Md, and a leading
authority of dietary chromium added, "Dr. Cefalu's
findings are exciting and could prove to be of great importance
if replicated in future studies. They are certainly consistent
with our findings which were reported at last year's ADA
meeting: We found improved blood sugar control in a group
of Chinese patients with type II diabetes who were supplemented
with chromium"
Insulin is the master metabolic hormone in the body, regulating
blood sugar. Chromium is an essential trace mineral required
by humans in order for insulin to work properly. In persons
with the most common form of diabetes, the effects of insulin
on lowering blood sugar are reduced. This decrease is referred
to as insulin resistance and is now believed to be the primary
defect in type II diabetes. Years before any signs or symptoms
of diabetes are seen in at-risk individuals (including those
with a family history of diabetes), insulin resistance begins
to take it toll on blood sugar control.
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