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During the COVID-19 pandemic, patients with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes were much more likely to be in severe diabetic ketoacidosis, says Mary Pat Gallagher, MD, director of the Pediatric Diabetes Center at Hassenfeld Childrenās Hospital at °µĶųTV Langone and assistant professor in the . Dr. Gallagherās talk, āEpidemiology of COVID-19 and Pediatric DiabetesāNew-Onset/Diabetic Ketoacidosis,ā was presented at the American Diabetes Associationās 81st Scientific Sessions.
āWhat we found was consistent with what was reported from other registries around the world, that people with type 1 diabetes, being newly diagnosed, presented in a much more severe state of metabolic disarray,ā says Dr. Gallagher. āThey were in diabetic ketoacidosis and were much more likely to be in whatās considered severe DKA with a pH of 7.1 or less.ā
Dr. Gallagher tells AJMC, āAs it is the pandemic of the 21st century, weāll be learning about COVID-19 for a long time. One of the most important questions in patients with diabetes is, āIn what way is it affecting onset and the presentation?ā I think from our data, we have a general sense that age is the most important risk factor for disease severity.ā
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