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Living with Diabetes

What You Should Know

Type 1 and Type 2

Diabetes type 1 is an autoimmune disease which affects the beta cells of the pancreas that produces insulin. This disease was formerly known as insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). This disease presents in children, as well as in adults, and is characterized by the loss of the beta cells of the pancreas, which are known as the islets of Langerhans. However, since type 1 diabetes was most commonly associated with children, it was formerly known as juvenile diabetes.

 

Diabetes is incurable; there is no method of prevention, and no way to reverse the disease. In type 2 diabetes, it can be managed by diet and a healthy lifestyle. In some cases a patient with type 1 diabetes can have a transplant of the islet cells of the pancreas to arrest the disease, but in type 2 diabetes this option is not available, because this from of the disease is not an autoimmune disease.

Signs and Symptoms

The symptoms of diabetes present itself with excessive thirst, frequent urination, unexplained weight loss, and extreme fatigue. These symptoms of diabetes can be present in both types of diabetes, especially if the patient has poor eating habits and leads a sedentary lifestyle.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis is usually made when patients report their symptoms of diabetes and complaints to their doctor. In the case of children the parents notice their symptoms of diabetes and complaints and take the child to their physician to be examined. Diabetes is often discovered when a patient is having other problems that they are seeking help for, such as: poor wound healing, ulcers of the feet, eye problems and fungal infections.

In the diagnostic phase of the examination, the doctor will test the patient’s blood glucose level when fasting. A normal fasting blood sugar (FBS) ranges from 70-99 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dl). Diabetes should be suspected if the FBS levels run between 100 mg/dl and 126 mg/dl, which are considered above normal for fasting levels.

Treatment and management

In type 1 diabetes the treatment is insulin replacement; without it diabetic ketoacidosis and coma can develop which will lead to death if not treated. Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease and is caused by the patient’s own immune system waging war against the proteins within the islet cells of the pancreas.

The antibodies of the immune system “see” these necessary proteins as a threat to the body and set out to destroy them, which results in the inability of the islets to produce insulin.

Insulin is a natural hormone produced in the islet cells of the pancreas. The function of insulin is to counteract high levels of blood glucose (hyperglycemia), by regulating glucose metabolism. Without the production of insulin, glucose, the fuel that our cells need to survive, cannot cross the outer membranes of the cells to nourish the cells of our body. Insulin carries glucose into the cells by a process called active transport. In short, insulin functions like a little taxi that carries the glucose molecules into the cells. The cells have a receptor, or more like a lock, and insulin has the key to unlock it, to allow the glucose to enter and nourish the whole body. Without insulin we would die.



 

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Symptoms Of Diabetes News

Check Your Health: What Are The Symptoms Of Prediabetes And What Should You Do? - Cheshire Herald


Check Your Health: What Are The Symptoms Of Prediabetes And What Should You Do?
Cheshire Herald
Most people with prediabetes do not have any symptoms and by the time they are symptomatic, the condition has progressed to diabetes. Cause of Prediabetes: Insulin resistance, a condition in which the body cells do not use insulin properly.
Take steps to detect, reverse pre-diabetesWisconsin Rapids Tribune
Improved Heart Health Directly Reduces Risk of Type 2 DiabetesDiets In Review (blog)

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Chronicle features writer talks about diabetes and pregnancy - ChronicleLive


Chronicle features writer talks about diabetes and pregnancy
ChronicleLive
I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in February 2010. I can still vividly remember sitting in the nurse's room and her taking my blood glucose reading. I'd suspected diabetes as I'd had all of the typical symptoms – extreme tiredness, thirstiness and ...

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CDC Now Recommends Hepatitis B Vaccine for Diabetics - Diets In Review (blog)


CDC Now Recommends Hepatitis B Vaccine for Diabetics
Diets In Review (blog)
This is where diabetics are at risk, not only for the pen needles and syringes used for injecting insulin, or their Byetta or Victoza, but also for the lancets they use to obtain blood for their glucometer readings. Symptoms of Hepatitis B include ...

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Weight loss is key in fighting type 2 diabetes - San Francisco Chronicle


Weight loss is key in fighting type 2 diabetes
San Francisco Chronicle
And most people with the type 2 disease can eliminate symptoms by losing some weight. Genetics is certainly a factor - many overweight people never develop the disease - but 85 percent or more of people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes are overweight or ...

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Don't wait for PAD symptoms before seeking information - Local 10


The Grand Rapids Press - MLive.com

Don't wait for PAD symptoms before seeking information
Local 10
The worst part of this reality is that most people with PAD don't experience any symptoms. PAD is dangerous, especially when there are no warning signs. Peripheral Arterial Disease is a progressive disease commonly called clogged arteries in the legs, ...
What your feet could be telling you about your heartThe Grand Rapids Press - MLive.com

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