Welcome to the December Issue of GEMS!
As Christmas ushers in a season of warmth, reflection, and renewal, December’s GEMS focuses on protecting the heart, strengthening metabolic resilience, and embracing evidence-based choices for long-term health. The festive season reminds us that care and compassion extend not only to others, but also to ourselves.
This issue highlights silent yet serious cardiovascular and metabolic risks. We open with a major study on sudden cardiac death in diabetes, underscoring how both type 1 and type 2 diabetes markedly increase the risk of fatal arrhythmias, even in younger individuals. This reinforces the need to recognise diabetes as a condition with immediate cardiac implications, not just long-term metabolic consequences.
We continue the cardiovascular theme with new evidence showing that reducing smoking is not enough, even light smoking carries significant cardiovascular risk, reaffirming that complete cessation remains the only safe option.
Innovation features strongly this month. We explore a novel polymer-based transdermal insulin system that could eliminate the need for injections, alongside emerging microbiome research revealing how gut-derived metabolites may protect against insulin resistance by modulating inflammatory pathways. Together, these studies point to more patient-friendly and biologically targeted future therapies.
Microvascular health is also in focus, with data showing that blood pressure variability plays a key role in diabetic retinopathy risk. Lifestyle science complements this, with long-term evidence confirming that combined improvements in diet quality and physical activity offer the greatest reductions in harmful visceral fat.
As always, GEMS blends science with everyday living. This month’s Healthy Recipe of the Month, a comforting yet balanced Creamy Cheddar Soup, reflects the season while keeping metabolic health in mind. We then feature our Picture of the Month, capturing academic leadership at ATTD Asia with Dr. Jothydev Kesavadev, alongside research presentations on telemedicine-supported semaglutide titration. Our Video of the Month brings highlights from the 53rd Annual RSSDI Conference at Kochi, showcasing the momentum of India’s diabetes community.
As the year draws to a close, this Christmas edition of GEMS reminds us that prevention, vigilance, innovation, and compassion must go hand in hand. Protecting the heart and nurturing metabolic health are among the most meaningful gifts we can give this season and beyond.
To visit our previous issues, click here
Thanking you once again for the comments and suggestions. If in case you are not interested in receiving this free monthly scientific newsletter, kindly reply with "delete gems" in the subject line to info@jothydev.net
Regards
JDC Diabetes Gems Team
Jothydev's Diabetes and Research Centres
Trivandrum, Attingal and Kochi, Kerala, INDIA
+91 9846040055, +91 9562040055
, +91 9746366655
http://www.jothydev.net
Welcome to the December Issue of GEMS!
As Christmas ushers in a season of warmth, reflection, and renewal, December’s GEMS focuses on
protecting the heart, strengthening metabolic resilience, and embracing evidence-based choices
for long-term health. The festive season reminds us that care and compassion extend not only to
others, but also to ourselves.
This issue highlights silent yet serious cardiovascular and metabolic risks. We open with a
major study on sudden cardiac ...death in diabetes, underscoring
how both type 1 and type 2 diabetes markedly increase the risk of fatal arrhythmias, even in younger
individuals. This reinforces the need to recognise diabetes as a condition with immediate cardiac
implications, not just long-term metabolic consequences.
We continue the cardiovascular theme with new evidence showing that reducing smoking is not enough,
even light smoking carries significant cardiovascular risk, reaffirming that complete cessation remains
the only safe option.
Innovation features strongly this month. We explore a novel polymer-based transdermal insulin system
that could eliminate the need for injections, alongside emerging microbiome research revealing how
gut-derived metabolites may protect against insulin resistance by modulating inflammatory pathways.
Together, these studies point to more patient-friendly and biologically targeted future therapies.
Microvascular health is also in focus, with data showing that blood pressure variability plays a key
role in diabetic retinopathy risk. Lifestyle science complements this, with long-term evidence confirming
that combined improvements in diet quality and physical activity offer the greatest reductions in harmful
visceral fat.
As always, GEMS blends science with everyday living. This month’s Healthy Recipe of the Month, a comforting
yet balanced Creamy Cheddar Soup, reflects the season while keeping metabolic health in mind. We then feature
our Picture of the Month, capturing academic leadership at ATTD Asia with Dr. Jothydev Kesavadev, alongside
research presentations on telemedicine-supported semaglutide titration. Our Video of the Month brings highlights
from the 53rd Annual RSSDI Conference at Kochi, showcasing the momentum of India’s diabetes community.
As the year draws to a close, this Christmas edition of GEMS reminds us that prevention, vigilance, innovation,
and compassion must go hand in hand. Protecting the heart and nurturing metabolic health are among the most
meaningful gifts we can give this season and beyond.
To visit our previous issues,
click here
Thanking you once again for the comments and suggestions. If in case you are not interested in receiving this free monthly scientific newsletter, kindly reply with "delete gems" in the subject line to info@jothydev.net
Regards
JDC Diabetes Gems Team
Jothydev's Diabetes and Research Centres
Trivandrum, Attingal and Kochi, Kerala, INDIA
+91 9846040055, +91 9562040055
,+91 9746366655
http://www.jothydev.net