학술논문
Stress and human health in diabetes: A report from the 19th Chicago Biomedical Consortium symposium
Document Type
article
Author
Raghavendra G. Mirmira; Rohit N. Kulkarni; Pingwen Xu; Tina Drossos; Krista Varady; Kristen L. Knutson; Sirimon Reutrakul; Pamela Martyn-Nemeth; Robert M. Sargis; Amisha Wallia; Arleen M. Tuchman; Jill Weissberg-Benchell; Kirstie K. Danielson; Scott A. Oakes; Celeste C. Thomas; Brian T. Layden; Sarah C. May; Michelle Burbea Hoffmann; Eleonora Gatta; Julian Solway; Louis H. Philipson
Source
Journal of Clinical and Translational Science, Vol 7 (2023)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
2059-8661
Abstract
Stress and diabetes coexist in a vicious cycle. Different types of stress lead to diabetes, while diabetes itself is a major life stressor. This was the focus of the Chicago Biomedical Consortium’s 19th annual symposium, “Stress and Human Health: Diabetes,” in November 2022. There, researchers primarily from the Chicago area met to explore how different sources of stress – from the cells to the community – impact diabetes outcomes. Presenters discussed the consequences of stress arising from mutant proteins, obesity, sleep disturbances, environmental pollutants, COVID-19, and racial and socioeconomic disparities. This symposium showcased the latest diabetes research and highlighted promising new treatment approaches for mitigating stress in diabetes.