Relations (1)

related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

Diabetes and coronary heart disease are frequently studied together as comorbid health outcomes in clinical research, as evidenced by their shared inclusion in the 2021 Global Nutrition Report [1] and their association with chronic inflammatory markers like CRP [2]. Furthermore, both conditions are identified as significant negative health outcomes linked to unresolved childhood trauma [3] and are often monitored concurrently in longitudinal health studies [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
Health and environmental impacts of diets worldwide globalnutritionreport.org Global Nutrition Report 1 fact
claimThe 2021 Global Nutrition Report analysis focused on the impacts of foods on coronary heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancers, and respiratory disease.
Extent and Health Consequences of Chronic Sleep Loss and ... - NCBI ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Colten HR, Altevogt BM · National Academies Press 1 fact
claimThe Nurses Health Study found an increased incidence of diabetes and heart attacks in a cohort that had no coronary heart disease at baseline (Ayas et al., 2003).
EBM Tools for Practice: Best Biomarkers for Inflammation lipid.org National Lipid Association 1 fact
claimA cohort study of patients with chronic inflammatory conditions revealed that the incidence of developing diabetes or coronary heart disease was greatest in those with the highest tertile of C-reactive protein (CRP).
Childhood Trauma and its effect on Adulthood - Palo Alto University paloaltou.edu Palo Alto University 1 fact
claimNegative health outcomes associated with unresolved childhood trauma include depressive disorder, chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder, asthma, kidney disease, stroke, coronary heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and obesity.