An article published in Diabetologia by Sanjoy Paul and colleagues examined the age–BMI relationship at the time of diagnosis of type 2 diabetes using data on 84,633 patients in the UK who were diagnosed with diabetes between January 1990 and April 2007. They observed that women develop type 2 diabetes at a higher body mass index than men. They also reported a significant difference in the inverse relationships between age and BMI for men and women and marked differences in the average BMI levels for men and women at younger ages, which decreased with increasing age.
An article published in Diabetologia by Sanjoy Paul and colleagues examined the age–BMI relationship at the time of diagnosis of type 2 diabetes using data on 84,633 patients in the UK who were diagnosed with diabetes between January 1990 and April 2007. They observed that women develop type 2 diabetes at a higher body mass index than men. They also reported a significant difference in the inverse relationships between age and BMI for men and women and marked differences in the average BMI levels for men and women at younger ages, which decreased with increasing age.
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