Do You Have Diabetes?
Millions of people have diabetes mellitus, commonly called diabetes. You may be surprised to know that many of these people don’t even know they have it.
Diabetes is a serious disease and should not be ignored. If you have it, correct treatment can help you live a long and healthy life.
What Is Diabetes?
If you have diabetes, your body can’t make or use insulin. Insulin helps change sugar into energy to keep you alive.
There are different kinds of diabetes. The main ones are type 1 and type 2.
Type 1 Diabetes
This type of diabetes is mostly found in children and young adults. If you have type 1 diabetes, your body does not make insulin and you must inject insulin daily.
You May:
urinate often
be very thirsty
be very hungry
lose a lot of weight
be very tired
be irritable
have blurred vision
have trouble seeing.
Type 2 Diabetes
Most people with diabetes have this form of the disease. Type 2 is usually found in people over 45, who have diabetes in their family, who are overweight, who don’t exercise, and who have cholesterol problems. It is also common in certain racial and ethnic groups (blacks, American Indians, and Hispanics) and in women who had diabetes when they were pregnant. If you have type 2 diabetes, your body cannot make enough insulin or correctly use it. Treatment is diabetes pills and sometimes insulin injections, as well as diet and exercise.
You May Have:
any of the symptoms of type 1 diabetes
a lot of infections
cuts or bruises that heal slowly
tingling or numbness in the hands or feet
skin, gum, or bladder infections that keep coming back.
Controlling Diabetes
Daily monitoring and careful control of blood sugar levels are the most important steps to take for people with diabetes. If not treated, diabetes can cause:
High blood sugar (which could make you thirsty, tired, lose weight, urinate often, or give you infections that won’t go away)
Many serious health problems (which could hurt your eyes, kidneys, nerves, or heart).
Warning: Low Blood Sugar
People with diabetes may develop low blood sugar because their blood has too much insulin or other blood sugar-lowering medication or from not eating enough food. It is important to follow the eating and medication schedule your doctor has prescribed to avoid low blood sugar.
Low blood sugar could make you shaky, dizzy, sweaty, hungry, have a headache, have pale skin color, have sudden mood or behavior changes, have clumsy or jerky movements, have difficulty paying attention, feel confused, or have tingling sensations around the mouth.
Taking Care of Your Diabetes
The best way to take care of your diabetes is to make sure the levels or amount of sugar in your blood are near the normal range. This will make you feel better and help you stay healthy.
Your doctor will tell you how often to check your blood sugar level. To do this, you will need to take a drop of your blood and place it on a special test strip. Then a device, called a blood glucose meter, reads the strip. This device measures the amount of sugar in your blood.
Writing down this level, along with the time and date, will help you see how well your treatment plan is working.
Remember:
A person’s blood sugar level rises after eating any meal that contains carbohydrates or protein. Table sugar (also called ?sucrose) counts as a carbohydrate. Artificial sweeteners, such as saccharin, aspartame (NutraSweet), and sucralose (Splenda), do not count as carbohydrates or fats. They make food taste sweet. But they do not raise blood sugar levels and have little or no calories.
What Else Can You Do?
Eat well-balanced meals. The right amount of healthy food will keep your weight under control and help manage your diabetes.
Your body needs food from the four main food groups every day:
Fruits and vegetables (oranges, apples, bananas, carrots, and spinach)
Whole grains, cereals, and bread (wheat, rice, oats, bran, and barley)
Dairy products (milk, cheese, and yogurt)
Meats, fish, poultry, eggs, dried beans, and nuts.
Remember:
Too much fat and cholesterol in your diet can be very harmful to people with diabetes. Food that is high in fat includes red meat, dairy products (whole milk, cream, cheese, and ice cream), egg yolks, butter, salad dressings, vegetable oils, and many desserts.
Can You Do Anything Else?
Exercise is important for good diabetes control. It usually lowers blood sugar and may help insulin work better. Exercise and a healthy diet can also help you take off extra pounds if you are overweight.
Warning:
Check with your doctor before starting any exercise program. You may need a snack before or during the activity to avoid having low blood sugar while you exercise.
2007-08-20 01:39:17
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answer #1
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answered by **Anti-PeTA** 5
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2016-09-17 19:30:25
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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No, it can NOT! Type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus are actually two different conditions related only by the symptoms experienced by sufferers. Type 1 diabetes mellitus is an autoimmune condition. Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a metabolic condition. Type 3 diabetes that has been mentioned is still NOT a recognised condition. It's based purely on suppositions put forward by some doctors, and many people are confused as to what it actually is. (It seems that the respondent who mentioned it seems to think that it's where both type 1 and type 2 are experienced by the same patient where, in fact, it's believed to be a separate condition that some type 2 patients develop, which leads to Alzheimer's disease.) Even if you need to go onto insulin injections, you would still be a type 2 diabetic ... assuming that the relevant tests have been carried out and you weren't misdiagnosed as a type 2. (Insulin is seen as a form of treatment when the pancreas either ceases to produce enough insulin, or ceases to produce any insulin.)
2016-03-14 21:38:45
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Type 2 diabetes is when your body can not use the insulin your body produces correctly. The best way that it was explained to me is think of the insulin receptor as being a perfect circle and the sugar in our bodies fit perfectly in these circles. With type 2 the circles are stretched out of shape so the sugars do not fit any more, thus leaving the sugars in our blood streams.
There are several thoughts on the cause of Type 2, the favorite is being overweight. It is more likely to occur if other family members have it. Eating foods that are high in carbohydrates or sugar do not cause diabetes.
Unfortunately, there may not be any symptoms until it is in advanced stages.
There are many treatments including diet, exercise, pills, and insulin. Only you and your doctor can decide what is the best option for you will be.
2007-08-20 21:02:36
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answer #4
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answered by Kelli M 2
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2016-05-18 06:47:39
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answer #5
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answered by ? 3
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type 2 diabetes is adult on-set diabetes, not the diabetes you get when you are a kid.
I've read its usually caused by a poor diet with too much sugar (although there is different theories about the cause).
when you eat carbohydrates, your body releases insulin which makes the decision to either use the carbs or store it as fat. if you've been eating too much high sugar food for too long, then the part of you that creates insulin wears out, or, your body just stops responding to the insulin hormone.
symptoms include sudden weight loss - especially when you've been overweight and the need to pee a lot.
treatment involves diabetic medication - some people have apparently been successful by altering their diet.
2007-08-19 18:08:34
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answer #6
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answered by loving30 4
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I'm a 45 year old woman and was recently diagnosed as being a borderline diabetic. My doctor prescribed some medication, but before filling it I decided to do some research on the internet which led me to the methods. After reading this ebook and applying the methods, my scepticism turned to 100% belief. I noticed that my energy levels increased significantly and I felt more rested in the morning, my symptoms started going away.
I am very happy to tell you that I have been feeling better than I have felt in years and my doctor informed me that he will be taking me off my prescriptions if I keep this up.
I recommend you use the Type 2 Diabetes Destroyer to naturally reverse your diabetes.
2016-05-15 04:57:49
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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It is when you become a diabetic at a later age, you are not born with is. Largely due to aging and not eating right over a long period of time.
Excessive thirst, hungry all the time, sleepy, groggy, irritable, frequent urination are among a few of the many symptoms. The average diabetic has the disease two years before they even notice and get checked for it.
There are many effective treaments that a doctor specializing in diabetes can give you. Usually pills, exercise and modifying what you eat. Exercise does wonders as do the current medications they give you.
2007-08-22 15:20:43
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Forget anything you have ever been told about Diabetes.
And get this - it has NOTHING to do with insulin, exercise, diet or anything else you've heard in the past.
It's all based on latest breakthrough research that Big Pharma is going Stir Crazy to hide from you.
Visit Here : http://DiabeteMiracle.com To Find Out What All The Fuss Is About.
2014-11-07 03:53:18
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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In a nutshell, it's where your insulin doesn't work as it should and your blood sugar goes up as it shouldn't. The insulin is the agent that gets the blood glucose into the cells where it is supposed to go. When it isn't working properly, that's called "insulin resistance"... the precursor to type 2 diabetes.
Having a genetic predisposition with one or more of the following. Poor diet. Excess weight. Lack of exercise.
I didn't have any symptoms. I was diagnosed during a routine physical. According to the ADA, most folks don't have any symptoms when they're diagnosed. Get checked. The earllier you get it diagnosed, the easier it will be to deal with.
Treatment is the opposite of the cause.... Healthy diet, lose the weight, exercise a lot. Read more here:
http://www.geocities.com/seabulls69/Type_II_Diabetes.html
2007-08-20 02:29:24
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answer #10
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answered by Mr. Peachy® 7
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