Prediabetes & Prevention Scottsboro AL

The problem of prediabetes, defined as overly high blood sugar (a fasting glucose level of 100 to 125 milligrams per deciliter or a two-hour glucose reading of 140 to 99), isn't just that it's the stepping'stone to the full-blown disease.

Bobby N Johnson, MD
(256) 551-4505
201 Sivley Rd SW
Huntsville, AL
Business
Drs Cowart & Johnson
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism

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Amy Hoth Warriner, MD
(205) 975-5786
510 20th Street S Suite 758,
Birmingham, AL
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: University of Arkansas: MD: 2002
Graduation Year: 2002

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Robert Milton Combs, MD
(334) 288-4121
2165 Normandie Dr
Montgomery, AL
Specialties
Internal Medicine, Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Emory Univ Sch Of Med, Atlanta Ga 30322
Graduation Year: 1958
Hospital
Hospital: Baptist Med Ctr, Montgomery, Al

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Robert Henry Creech, MD
(256) 589-0207
2583 Dug Hill Rd
Brownsboro, AL
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism, Adolescent Medicine-Pediatrics
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Pittsburgh Sch Of Med, Pittsburgh Pa 15261
Graduation Year: 1970

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Alan Howard Morris, MD
(251) 438-4600
1720 Spring Hill Ave Ste 500
Mobile, AL
Specialties
Pediatrics, Pediatric Endocrinology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Il Coll Of Med, Chicago Il 60680
Graduation Year: 1979

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Dale Allen Freeman, MD
(205) 558-4711
700 19th St S
Birmingham, AL
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Tx Southwestern Med Ctr At Dallas, Med Sch, Dallas Tx 75235
Graduation Year: 1977

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Malek S Karassi
(205) 787-2669
817 Princeton Ave Sw
Birmingham, AL
Specialty
Internal Medicine, Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism

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Ruth Miller Frost, MD
(334) 272-2288
7216 Copperfield Dr
Montgomery, AL
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism, Internal Medicine
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Ne Coll Of Med, Omaha Ne 68198
Graduation Year: 1976
Hospital
Hospital: Baptist Med Ctr East, Montgomery, Al

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Lianke Mu, MD
(256) 494-0990
100 Medical Center Dr
Gadsden, AL
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Fourth Military Univ, Shaanxi, China
Graduation Year: 1986

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Edison Goncalves, MD
(205) 877-2843
2022 Brookwood Medical Ctr Dr Ste 408
Birmingham, AL
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Fed De Rio Grande Do Sul, Fac De Med, Porto Alegre, Rs, Brazil
Graduation Year: 1982

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Heal Thyself - Spotlight on Prediabetes

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By Christie Aschwanden

When Karen Bouse was in her late forties, a series of puzzling dizzy spells sent her to the doctor’s office. It turned out the dizziness was linked to stress, but the blood tests her doctor ordered yielded an unpleasant surprise—Bouse was prediabetic.

Like most of us, Bouse was well aware of the epidemic of diabetes that’s been wreaking havoc with the health of some 18 million Americans. But she was taken aback to learn that another 41 million of us suffer from prediabetes—a condition that’s risky in its own right—and that she was one of them.

The problem of prediabetes, defined as overly high blood sugar (a fasting glucose level of 100 to 125 milligrams per deciliter or a two-hour glucose reading of 140 to 99), isn’t just that it’s the stepping-stone to the full-blown disease. A study of more than a million people published last January found that just being prediabetic was linked to developing, and dying from, several types of cancer. “And simply having blood sugar levels in the prediabetic range puts people at 50 percent greater risk of heart disease or stroke,” says Massachusetts General Hospital dietitian Linda Delahanty, author of Beating Diabetes.

For Bouse, now 62, these statistics hit close to home. Her diabetic mother had her first heart attack at age 56 and died at 62. Among her five siblings, Bouse is the only one who hasn’t either developed diabetes or suffered a heart attack.

That’s largely because she was lucky enough to have gotten tested early—something more of us should be doing, says endocrinologist Robert Rizza, president-elect of the American Diabetes Association. Since prediabetes lurks silently, most people who have it don’t have a clue they’re in danger. If you’ve been steadily gaining weight that you can’t seem to shed, don’t exercise regularly, have a family history of diabetes, or are over 45, you should have your blood sugar checked, then rechecked every three to five years.

And if it’s high, what then? At least there’s one bright spot in this dreary picture: Prediabetes can be reversed, without resorting to medication. Here’s what you need to do.

Get moving
One of the simplest ways to move yourself out of the prediabetic category is to, well, move.

A landmark study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2002 showed that building even a little exercise into your day (along with dietary changes, more about which later) can substantially cut blood sugar levels.

The trial, known as the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP), enrolled 3,234 prediabetic people to examine whether diabetes could be prevented. The participants were assigned to one of three groups. One took the diabetes drug metformin, another group got a placebo, and the third started exercising and tweaked their diets.

The results were so dramatic that researchers stopped the trial early so that everyone in the study could take up the lifestyle program. People in the diet and exercise group reduced their...

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