Newswise — Americans who live with spinal cord
injury do not appear to be at greater risk of developing carbohydrate
and lipid disorders such as insulin resistance, diabetes, impaired
glucose tolerance, and high or low blood cholesterol levels –
risk factors for heart disease – than able-bodied persons,
according to a new evidence review by HHS’ Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality.
More than a quarter
million Americans live with a Disability due to spinal cord injury, and
11,000 are hospitalized annually. Spinal cord injury is usually caused
by a sudden traumatic blow to the spine such as from accidents or
violent events, including combat.
The
review’s authors, who are with the AHRQ-supported Minnesota
Evidence-Based Practice Center in Minneapolis, caution clinicians on
depending on the Body Mass Index to assess obesity --- a key risk
factor for developing diabetes and heart disease – in spinal
cord-injured patients because it may underestimate their fat mass and
is likely inaccurate. Spinal cord injured persons lose muscle mass that
is replaced by fat mass.
In addition, the
reviewers found no scientific support for establishing different
standards for measuring carbohydrate and lipid disorders in spinal
cord-injured persons versus the established ones for defining and
treating these problems in people without such injuries.
The
reviewers also caution researchers against attempting to use findings
from studies of people without spinal cord injuries to estimate the
effectiveness and harms of interventions, such as exercise, in spinal
cord-injured people because they may have unique physiologic
differences.
The reviewers recommend further
research, including a large, prospective, multicenter cohort study of
adults with spinal cord injury.
AHRQ’s evidence report was requested and funded by the Paralyzed Veterans of America Spinal Cord Medicine Consortium.
The
report released today, Carbohydrate and Lipid Disorders and Relevant
Considerations in Persons with Spinal Cord Injury is the newest
analysis from AHRQ's Evidenced-based Practice Program. The complete
report can be found at http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/tp/carbliptp.htm.