Michelle Trachtenberg died from diabetes complications, medical examiner rules. What problems can the disease cause?
Michelle Trachtenberg died as a result of complications of diabetes, New York City's medical examiner said Wednesday, ruling the manner of death as natural. The 39-year-old actress was found dead in her apartment in the city on Feb. 26.
Since then, the cause and manner of her death had remained unclear. The Gossip Girl star's family had objected to an autopsy, the New York City Medical Examiner's Office told People the day after authorities found her.
However, a spokesperson for the office explained "the amended determination was made following review of toxicology testing results." They indicated toxicology testing can be done without an autopsy.
This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Contact a qualified medical professional before engaging in any physical activity, or making any changes to your diet, medication or lifestyle.
Trachtenberg had a liver transplant months before she died, a source confirmed with Yahoo Entertainment. According to People, a source said the Buffy the Vampire Slayer star had been "really, really down emotionally" and "told friends she was struggling" in the last year. They added she was "really, really sick," and looked "pale, gaunt, very thin and dealing with health issues."
In January 2024, the New York-born actress hit back at critics who made comments about her appearance after she shared a selfie on Instagram. "Fun fact. This is my face," she wrote at the time. "Not malnutrition no problems. Why do you have to hate? Get a calendar."
Read on to learn more about diabetes, and what potential complications can arise from the condition.
Diabetes, or diabetes mellitus, is a chronic disease that occurs when the body has problems with insulin, either with the pancreas not producing enough of the hormone or when the body can't effectively use the insulin it produces. Insulin is a hormone that regulates blood sugar, or glucose, which is the brain's main source of fuel; glucose is also an important source of energy for the cells that make up the muscles and tissues.
When the body has problems with insulin, glucose can build up in the bloodstream, causing high blood sugar or hyperglycemia. Over time, having consistently high blood glucose can lead to serious health problems.
There are several types of diabetes, including type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease where the immune system attacks insulin-producing cells in your pancreas. Type 2 diabetes is when the body doesn't make enough insulin and/or when the body's cells are resistant to insulin.
Some people who have diabetes won't have symptoms, according to Mayo Clinic, especially those with prediabetes, gestational diabetes or type 2 diabetes. For people with type 1 diabetes, symptoms are typically more severe and arise more quickly. Symptoms of type 1 and type 2 diabetes include:
Feeling thirstier than usual
Frequent urination
Unexplained weight loss
Fatigue
Blurred vision
Numbness or tingling in the hands or feet
Slow-healing cuts and sores
Frequent infections, such as skin, gum and vaginal infections
Developing diabetes is a common complication after having an organ transplant. Posttransplant diabetes mellitus, or PTDM, affects between 10 per cent and 40 per cent of patients undergoing solid organ transplantation, according to the National Institutes of Health. It's also associated with a higher mortality rate compared to patients who don't develop the condition.
A 2022 study published in the National Library of Medicine noted developing diabetes is as common for kidney transplant recipients (up to 25 per cent) as those who receive liver transplants. It's also more common for lung (up to 35 per cent) and heart transplant patients (up to 40 per cent).
According to Cleveland Clinic, diabetes can lead to acute and long-term health complications. Acute — meaning sudden and severe — problems might include:
Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS): Mainly affecting people with type 2 diabetes, this occurs when a person's blood sugar levels are very high for a long period, requiring immediate medical treatment.
Diabetes-related ketoacidosis (DKA): Mainly affecting people with type 1 diabetes, this occurs when your body doesn't have enough insulin. Without insulin and glucose, the body will burn fat for energy, releasing a substance called ketones that will turn your blood acidic.
Severe low blood sugar (hypoglycemia): This occurs when your blood sugar level drops below the healthy range, mainly affecting people with diabetes who use insulin.
If blood glucose levels remain too high for too long, it can damage the body's tissues and organs. This is mainly due to damage to the blood vessels and nerves. Cardiovascular are the most common type of long-term diabetes complication, including coronary artery disease, heart attack, stroke and atherosclerosis. Other long-term issues might be:
Nerve damage
Nephropathy, which can lead to kidney failure
Retinopathy, which can lead to blindness
Foot conditions
Skin infections
Amputations
Sexual dysfunction, such as erectile dysfunction or vaginal dryness
Gastroparesis
Hearing loss
Oral health issues, such as gum disease
Mental health problems
According to Diabetes Canada, the condition contributes to 40 per cent of heart attacks, 30 per cent of strokes, 50 per cent of kidney failure requiring dialysis and 70 per cent of all non-traumatic leg and foot amputations. Diabetes is also the leading cause of blindess.
Diabetes is one of the most common conditions affecting people living in Canada. The Public Health Agency of Canada noted around 3.8 million people over the age of one live with diagnosed diabetes. That's 10 per cent of the population, but also excludes gestational diabetes.
The number of people living with diabetes in Canada is expected to grow as the population ages and grows. Diabetes is also one of the most common chronic diseases among children and youth; while type 1 diabetes is more common, type 2 diabetes is rising amid growing rates of childhood obesity.
The World Health Organization (WHO) noted that as of 2022, roughly 830 million people around the world are living with diabetes. That's a rise from around 200 million people reportedly living with the disease in 1990.
Health-care providers will diagnose diabetes by checking glucose levels in a blood test. Three tests can measure your blood glucose level, including a fasting test, a random test and a A1c test. Typically, medical professionals rely on more than one test to diagnose diabetes.
The fasting test requires patients to not eat or drink for eight hours, allowing health-care providers to see the body's baseline blood sugar level.
The random test means a patient can get the test at any time, regardless of whether they've fasted.
The third A1c or glycated hemoglobin test shows the average blood glucose level over the past two to three months.
It's important to note people living with diabetes can live a healthy life — if they make proper lifestyle changes. That might include regular exercise, dietary changes and regular blood sugar monitoring.
Diabetes Canada noted the condition can reduce people's lifespans by five to 13 years. "It is estimated that the all-cause mortality rate among people living with diabetes is twice as high as the all-cause mortality rate for those without diabetes," the organization indicated.
Diabetes was the direct cause of 1.6 million deaths around the world in 2021, according to the WHO. Moreover, an additional 530,000 kidney disease deaths were caused by diabetes.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Medscape
2 hours ago
- Medscape
The Most Vicious Cycle of All: Cardiac PTSD
Just surviving a major cardiac event is an achievement, but of course getting through whatever initial resuscitation and procedures necessary are merely the first steps. As a patient embarks on their rehabilitation journey, one incredibly dangerous setback cardiologists must be on the lookout for is cardiac posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This remarkably common complication — according to a 2004 study published in Critical Care Medicine , as many as 27% of those who survive cardiac events may develop PTSD — can not only cause noncompliance with medication and other ongoing treatment modalities but also put the patient at an increased risk for a second cardiac event. 'In the aftermath of cardiac arrest or a heart attack, one of the most overlooked aspects of recovery is the emotional toll it takes, said Srihari S. Naidu, MD, a professor of medicine at New York Medical College and director of the Cardiac Cath Labs at the Westchester Medical Center Health Network, both in Valhalla, New York. 'The experience can be deeply traumatic, not just for the patient, but for their loved ones as well. Despite this, mental health remains one of the least systematically addressed components of cardiac care.' One problem, Naidu said, is that we 'still, we lack standardized approaches to routinely screen, diagnose, and treat PTSD in this vulnerable population.' Indeed, the American Heart Association identified this as a problem in its 2020 scientific statement, Sudden Cardiac Arrest Survivorship. In this publication, the association said the coordination of multidisciplinary care, to include emotional care, must start as early as within the ICU, but that it needs to continue throughout the recovery period. Srihari S. Naidu, MD 'Without a coordinated plan during hospitalization to assess both short- and long-term recovery needs, we risk missing the broader picture,' said Naidu, who is also the president of the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions. 'In my experience, the outpatient clinic visit is often the first, and sometimes the only, opportunity to uncover these issues, which may manifest as anxiety or persistent thoughts about the event, or a variety of unrelated symptoms.' James Jackson, MD, director of Behavioral Health and professor of medicine and psychiatry at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, said the symptoms are all united by one thing: The fact that the patient has the source of their trauma with them at all times. 'If you're carrying your heart around with you and the heart is the source of the trauma, you're constantly reminded, right? And if your cardiac event developed out of the blue, the concern is it could develop out of the blue again, right? So you're carrying this trauma around with you. It's a constant reminder,' he said. 'The trauma is not parked somewhere in the rear view. The trauma is sort of in the present and even in the future.' Symptom-wise, this trauma manifests itself in a variety of ways and can often go overlooked due to the focus on the physical recovery, Naidu said. 'During follow-up, subtle cues begin to emerge; patients who seem emotionally distant, who have trouble sleeping, or who avoid talking about what happened (can be red flags),' he said. 'PTSD doesn't always present dramatically.' Sometimes, Naidu said, it's the patient who suddenly bursts into tears when recalling the event. Other times, it's the one who avoids follow-ups, skips cardiac rehab, or steers clear of anything that reminds them of the hospital. Early symptoms may include hypervigilance, nightmares, intrusive memories, emotional numbness, and avoidance. The Cycle Folds Onto Itself When you break it down and look at triggering factors, it's not hard to understand how PTSD becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. 'Often with patients in a cardiac context, they get quite anxious. Their heart starts beating fast, and then they really worry. And so their response to that is, I'm going to withdraw. I'm going to disengage,' Jackson said. While physical activity or exercise often helps reduce stress, patients are often short of breath and are reminded how it felt when they were having the attack. James Jackson, MD 'And so if they start to exercise, it's all well and good,' Jackson said. 'But as soon as they get slightly short of breath, even if they're fine physiologically, as soon as they get short of breath, they're going to shut that down. And this is just one example, but it becomes a very isolating sort of process.' Patients left in this sustained crisis state experience a significantly diminished overall quality of life, and a study led by Antonia Seligowski and published in the March 2024 issue of Brain, Behavior, and Immunity found that PTSD after cardiac arrest significantly increases the risks for both major adverse cardiovascular events and all-cause mortality within just 1 year of discharge. This is supported by the findings of Donald Edmondson, MD, associate professor of behavioral medicine in medicine and psychiatry at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York City, both in his 2013 study published in the American Heart Journal and in research he has done since. 'Over the years now, we've studied cardiac patients, both acute coronary syndrome, so myocardial infarction, as well as cardiac arrest and stroke,' Edmondson said. 'What we see is that between 15 and 30% of patients will screen positive for PTSD due to that cardiac event 1 month later. Those who screen positive for PTSD are at least at doubled risk, if not greater, for having another cardiac event or dying within the year after that first cardiac event.' These outcomes highlight how critical it is to address PTSD early and effectively, Naidu said. 'As cardiologists, we often focus on optimizing medications, procedures, and physical rehabilitation, but without integrating behavioral support, we're missing a major part of the healing process,' he said. PTSD and cardiovascular disease have a well-documented relationship: PTSD can worsen cardiovascular risk, and in turn, living with heart disease can amplify psychological stress. Jackson said that there are behavioral health approaches at work in other areas that may be useful for cardiac events that are not sudden onset. 'There's a general sort of a movement afoot called prehab,' Jackson said. 'The general idea about prehab would be, 'Hey, you're going to have this surgery. We think that it's going to knock your brain down. So we're going to try to do some brain training with you before the surgery, and we think that in doing that, we're going to build your reserve up.' Is There a Type? Although a 2022 study led by Sophia Armand and published in the Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing showed that younger age, female sex, and high levels of acute stress at the time of the event to be significant risk factors for developing PTSD after cardiac arrest. There's no one overarching 'profile' in terms of who's likely to develop PTSD after any cardiac event. Naidu has his hunches, though. Donald Edmondson, MD 'I would say that I suspect cardiac arrest is more frequently associated with PTSD than other types of cardiac events. Compared to conditions like myocardial infarction or unstable angina, the psychological impact of cardiac arrest, particularly when complicated by anoxic brain injury, tends to be more profound,' Naidu said, cautioning that individual risk factors should be weighed in every case. 'Anoxic injury significantly increases the risk of depression, anxiety, and PTSD, often for an uncertain duration.' At Columbia, Edmondson said there are two indicators that together predict a high risk for a cardiac patient developing PTSD. 'They tend to pay close attention to their cardiac sensations and catastrophize them,' Edmondson said of the patients who go on to develop PTSD. 'Initially, in the ER [emergency room], they're extremely distressed. Then, post event, they'll say over the past 4 weeks, when I feel my heart beating fast, I worry that I'm having another heart attack. Or if I feel short of breath, I worry that I'm going to die.' 'Having those two predictors together, so initial high distress in the emergency department and this sort of high, what we call interoceptive bias, those two things together place people at high risk for developing PTSD at that 1-month period (after their cardiac event).' Regardless, more research must be done on this extremely risky and highly debilitating mental health issue that's so deeply entwined with its cardiac trigger. 'More focused studies are needed to better understand the timing, risk factors, and mechanisms behind these symptoms, and to develop standardized strategies for early screening, intervention, and long-term psychological support,' said Naidu. 'An urgent need exists to screen for and treat PTSD, not just for mental health but to help prevent repeat hospitalizations and improve long-term cardiovascular outcomes.'


Washington Post
8 hours ago
- Washington Post
Kennedy's new CDC panel includes members who have criticized vaccines and spread misinformation
NEW YORK — U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Wednesday named eight new vaccine policy advisers to replace the panel that he abruptly dismissed earlier this week . They include a scientist who researched mRNA vaccine technology and became a conservative darling for his criticisms of COVID-19 vaccines, a leading critic of pandemic-era lockdowns, and a professor of operations management.
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Celebrity fitness coach Kory Phillips celebrates 14 years of business in Shreveport
SHREVEPORT, La. (KTAL/KMSS) – Lovely Body Health & Fitness is celebrating 14 years making Shreveporters sweat. In a city where health and wellness are increasingly becoming a priority, Kory Phillips, better known as @IAmTheKingOfFitness, is celebrating an impressive milestone: 14 years in business as the owner of Lovely Bodies Health & Fitness. The two-day event kicked off with a boot scootin' line dancing class to get the body moving, followed by his signature Revenge Body workout on the second calorie-torching routine aims to burn over 1000 calories in just one session and earns rave reviews from clients and staff alike. His innovative training programs, motivational coaching style, and dedication to client success before and after photos have earned him a loyal gym clientele and nearly 400,000 followers on Instagram. Line dance instructor Breanka Thomas recounts her first time visiting the gym 'I went to the gym and fell in love. All the women from the page were in there with the same results. They all were working out with 50 and 60-pound weights in their hands and that was the wildest thing I'd ever seen.' Over the years, Phillips has made a significant impact not only on his clients but also on the community. For the past 13 years, the dedicated team at Lovely Bodies has consistently provided weekly meals to those in need, a tradition that continues even as the brand expands.. After opening his gym, he expanded to Atlanta and gained a reputation as a celebrity personal trainer, attracting clients from all walks of life, including influencers like Kai Cenat, business professionals like Angela Simmons, musicians, and fitness enthusiasts. For those looking to start their fitness journey or enhance their current routines, Lovely Bodies Health & Fitness offers virtual fitness classes that can be joined directly from the Shreveport studio. For more information or to sign up, you can contact Lovely Bodies Shreveport on Instagram or by calling 318-459-8050. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.