Prevalence and Incidence of Type 2 diabetes
Prevalance of Type 2 diabetes:
16 million Americans (NWHIC, includes undiagnosed); 7.2 million (actually diagnosed) ... see also overview of Type 2 diabetes.
Prevalance Rate:
approx 1 in 17 or 5.88% or 16 million people in USA [Source statistic for calcuation: "16 million Americans (NWHIC, includes undiagnosed); 7.2 million (actually diagnosed)" -- see also general information about data sources]
Type 2 diabetes Prevalence: Book Excerpts
Incidence (annual) of Type 2 diabetes:
approximately 798,000 new cases of diabetes annually in USA, most are Type 2 diabetes (CDC-OC) ... see also overview of Type 2 diabetes.
Incidence Rate:
approx 1 in 340 or 0.29% or 798,000 people in USA [Source statistic for calcuation: "approximately 798,000 new cases of diabetes annually in USA, most are Type 2 diabetes (CDC-OC)" -- see also general information about data sources]
Incidence extrapolations for USA for Type 2 diabetes:
797,999 per year,
66,499 per month,
15,346 per week,
2,186 per day,
91 per hour,
1 per minute,
0 per second.
[Source statistic for calculation: "approximately 798,000 new cases of diabetes annually in USA, most are Type 2 diabetes (CDC-OC)" -- see also general information about data sources]
Worldwide prevalence of Type 2 diabetes:
150 million cases worldwide 2002(Integrated Management of Cardiovascular Risk – Report of a WHO Meeting, 2002)
Prevelance of Type 2 diabetes discussion:
Diabetes Statistics in the United States: NIDDK (Excerpt)
Total: 15.7 million people--5.9 percent
of the population--have diabetes.
Diagnosed: 10.3 million people
Undiagnosed: 5.4
million people
(Source: excerpt from
Diabetes Statistics in the United States: NIDDK)
Diabetes Statistics in the United States: NIDDK (Excerpt)
"Other specific types" of diabetes result from specific genetic
syndromes, surgery, drugs, malnutrition, infections, and other illnesses.
Such types of diabetes may account for 1 to 2 percent of all diagnosed
cases of diabetes.
(Source: excerpt from Diabetes Statistics in the United States: NIDDK)
Incidence of Type 2 diabetes:
New cases diagnosed per year: 798,000.
(Source: excerpt from Diabetes Statistics in the United States: NIDDK)
Prevelance statistics for Type 2 diabetes:
The following statistics relate to the prevalence of Type 2 diabetes:
- 90-95% of total diabetes prevalence is Type 1 diabetes
- 11.8% of African American women over 20; 1-in-4 African American women over 55 (NWHIC)
- 12.2 of Native Americans over 19; 50% of Pima Indians aged 30-64 (NWHIC)
- 25 percent of Hispanic American women (NWHIC); 1.2 million diagnosed Hispanic Americans
- 3,331 non-English speaking men per 100,000 population have type 2 diabetes in Australia 2001 (Australia’s Health 2004, AIHW)
- more statistics...»
Types of Type 2 diabetes
Statistics about types of Type 2 diabetes:
- Type 2 Diabetes accounts for 85-90% of all diabetes cases in Australia (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, 2003)
- Type 1 Diabetes accounts for 10-15% of all diabetes cases in Australia (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, 2003)
- Type 2 diabetes accounted for 60% of new cases of diabetes in Australia 1999-2002 (The National Diabetes Register, Australia’s Health 2004, AIHW)
- more types...»
More Statistics about Type 2 diabetes:
Hospitalization statistics
Cost statistics
All statistics for Type 2 diabetes
Prevalence/Incidence of Type 2 diabetes: Online Medical Books
16 MEDICAL BOOKS ONLINE!
Review excerpts from medical books online, free, without registration,
for more information about the prevalence and/or incidence of Type 2 diabetes.
Diabetes insipidus:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Diabetes insipidus results centrally from intracranial neoplastic or metastatic lesions, hypophysectomy or other neurosurgery, a skull fracture, or head trauma that damages the neurohypophyseal structures. It can also result nephrogenically from infection, granulomatous disease, and vascular lesions; it may be idiopathic and, rarely, familial. (Note: Pituitary diabetes insipidus shouldn’t be confused with nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, a rare congenital disturbance of water metabolism that results from renal tubular resistance to vasopressin.)
Normally, the hypothalamus synthesizes vasopressin. The posterior pituitary gland (or neurohypophysis) stores vasopressin and releases it into general circulation, where it causes the kidneys to reabsorb water by making the distal tubules and collecting duct cells water-permeable. The absence of vasopressin in diabetes insipidus allows the filtered water to be excreted in the urine instead of being reabsorbed.
Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus involves a defect in the parts of the kidneys that reabsorb water back into the bloodstream. It occurs less commonly than central diabetes insipidus. Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus may occur as an inherited disorder in which male children receive the abnormal gene that causes the disease on the X chromosome from their mothers. Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus may also be caused by diseases of the kidney (such as polycystic kidney disease) and the effects of certain drugs (such as lithium and amphotericin B).
Diabetes insipidus is rare, affecting 1 in 25,000 people. Males and females are affected equally.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Diabetes mellitus:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
DM affects an estimated 6% of the population of the United States, about half of whom are undiagnosed. Incidence is greater in females and rises with age. Type 2 accounts for 90% of cases.
In type 1 diabetes, pancreatic beta-cell destruction or a primary defect in beta-cell function results in failure to release insulin and ineffective glucose transport. Type 1 immune-mediated diabetes is caused by cell-mediated destruction of pancreatic beta cells. The rate of beta-cell destruction is usually higher in children than in adults. The idiopathic form of type 1 diabetes has no known cause. Patients with this form have no evidence of autoimmunity and don’t produce insulin.
In type 2 diabetes, beta cells release insulin, but receptors are insulin-resistant and glucose transport is variable and ineffective. Risk factors for type 2 diabetes include:
❑ obesity (even an increased percentage of body fat primarily in the abdominal region); risk decreases with weight and drug therapy
❑ lack of physical activity
❑ history of GDM
❑ hypertension
❑ Black, Hispanic, Pacific Islander, Asian American, Native American origin
❑ strong family history of diabetes
❑ older than age 45
❑ high-density lipoprotein cholesterol of less than 35 or triglyceride of greater than 250
❑ Seriously impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) test.
ELDER TIP As the body ages, the cells become more resistant to insulin, thus reducing the older adult’s ability to metabolize glucose. In addition, the release of insulin from the pancreatic beta cells is reduced and delayed. These combined processes result in hyperglycemia. In the older patient, sudden concentrations of glucose cause increased and more prolonged hyperglycemia.
The “other specific types” of DM result from various conditions (such as a genetic defect of the beta cells or endocrinopathies) or from use of or exposure to certain drugs or chemicals. GDM is considered present whenever a patient has any degree of abnormal glucose during pregnancy. This form may result from weight gain and increased levels of estrogen and placental hormones, which antagonize insulin.
Insulin transports glucose into the cell for use as energy and storage as glycogen. It also stimulates protein synthesis and free fatty acid storage in the fat deposits. Insulin deficiency compromises the body tissues’access to essential nutrients for fuel and storage.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Hereditary fructose intolerance:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait, hereditary fructose intolerance results from a deficiency in the enzyme fructose-1-phosphate aldolase. The enzyme operates at only 1% to 10% of its normal biological activity, thus preventing rapid uptake of fructose by the liver after ingestion of fruit or foods containing cane sugar.
In some European countries, hereditary fructose intolerance may have an incidence as high as 1 in 20,000 people.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Diabetes Mellitus:
Diabetes Mellitus - epidemiology
(The 5-Minute Pediatric Consult)
- Most common endocrine disorder of childhood
- Type 1 DM: More common in whites of Northern European descent
- Type 2 DM: More common in obese African Americans, Latinos, and Native Americans with strong family history
Diabetes Mellitus - incidence
- Type 1 DM:
- Annual US incidence is ~19/100,000 in children 10–19 years old.
- Incidence of type 1 DM is rising by 3% per year, but faster in young children.
- Type 2 DM:
- Incidence is increasing rapidly in adolescents.
- May be 8–45% of new cases of diabetes in youth, depending on location
Diabetes Mellitus - prevalence
- Type 1 DM: Prevalence of type 1 diabetes in youth 0–19 years in US is ~2/1,000.
- Type 2 DM:
- Estimated prevalence of type 2 DM in youth of 4.1/1,000
- Estimated prevalence of impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) in youth at least 2/1,000
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: The 5-Minute Pediatric Consult, 2008
About prevalence and incidence statistics:
The term 'prevalence' of Type 2 diabetes usually refers to the estimated population
of people who are managing Type 2 diabetes at any given time.
The term 'incidence' of Type 2 diabetes refers to the annual diagnosis rate,
or the number of new cases of Type 2 diabetes diagnosed each year.
Hence, these two statistics types can differ:
a short-lived disease like flu can have high annual incidence but low prevalence,
but a life-long disease like diabetes has a low annual incidence but high prevalence.
For more information see about prevalence and incidence statistics.
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