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Management of Diabetes During Ramadan

Recommendations for Management of Diabetes During Ramadan

These provisional recommendations await well-designed research aimed specifically at seeing whether fasting is beneficial or harmful to patients with type 1 diabetes.


Type 1 diabetic patients are often advised not to fast by physicians. The nature of type 1 diabetes makes fasting hazardous. Thus, type 1 diabetic patients are put in the category of very high risk in the recommendations. Evidence-based scientific data will definitely help physicians caring for such patients to decide whether to advise patients with type 1 diabetes strongly or half-heartedly about fasting.

Patient education regarding fasting during the holy month of Ramadan is badly needed. Research in this area is also deficient. In a recent study, only 33% of our diabetic patients received general advice on fasting during Ramadan (2). Morbidity related to fasting has been reported to be quite high. The rates of severe hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia were alarmingly high in the Epidemiology of Diabetes and Ramadan study, a population-based large epidemiological study that spanned 13 countries with sizeable Muslim populations (3). Such a high rate of fasting-related morbidity was reported earlier in a small study by Uysal et al. (4). Education of patients is the cornerstone of safe fasting, which is needed on both an individual and large-scale level, and this is the responsibility of diabetes care team members.

Diabetic patients with established renal disease run substantial risk of complications by fasting and rightly the recommendations put them in the high-risk category. The great majority of those patients have major comorbidities and are taking many drugs, including insulin and sulfonylurea agents, which make them prone to severe hypoglycemia. We feel that these patients need to be singled out more specifically in the guidelines as such groups, even those who receive renal replacement therapy, often insist on fasting (A.A.A.-A., unpublished observations). Fasting for prolonged periods, especially in hot climates, may impose negative impacts on renal function from hypovolemia and dehydration. The mainstay of management of those patients is targeted toward arresting the progression of their underlying renal disease, and fasting during Ramadan should not be recommended.

Another group that deserves special consideration is adolescent patients with type 1 diabetes. These patients should not be encouraged to fast, as recurrent severe hypoglycemia may have grave consequences, especially on neurobehavioral development (5,6,7). We feel that this group should have been pointed out categorically.

Finally, we commend the efforts of the expert panel, which took the painstaking task of drafting these long-awaited recommendations. Taking the issue of Ramadan and diabetes further warrants randomized controlled studies to explore the perceived benefits and expected risks of fasting, which will provide the scientific platform for future updated recommendations. Only when this is coupled with mass educational campaigns to patients with diabetes will the expected benefits from fasting be fulfilled.

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