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Home - Infectious Diseases - The Heart’s Hidden Risk: How Heart Failure Can Trigger New Diabetes

Infectious Diseases

The Heart’s Hidden Risk: How Heart Failure Can Trigger New Diabetes

Last updated: January 31, 2026 9:39 am
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The Heart’s Hidden Risk: How Heart Failure Can Trigger New Diabetes

A recent study published in *Diabetes Care* investigates the complex relationship between heart failure and the onset of type 2 diabetes in patients with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction. The research examines the interplay between heart failure events and the development of new diabetes, while also evaluating the potential role of the medication finerenone in this dynamic. This analysis is crucial for understanding how cardiovascular and metabolic diseases are intertwined, offering insights into patient trajectories and potential therapeutic interventions that could address both conditions simultaneously.

Why it might matter to you: For professionals focused on infectious diseases, this research highlights a critical comorbidity pathway. Patients with chronic conditions like heart failure and diabetes often have altered immune function and are at significantly higher risk for severe outcomes from bacterial and viral infections, including pneumonia and sepsis. Understanding these epidemiological links is essential for risk stratification, infection control protocols, and tailoring antimicrobial therapy in complex, multimorbid patient populations.

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Previous Article Heart failure and diabetes: a two-way street for brain health
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