Diabetes
Diabetes is a disease in which your body is unable to properly use and store glucose.
Glucose backs up in the bloodstream causing your blood glucose or "sugar" to rise too
high.
There are two major types of diabetes, Type I and Type II. In Type I diabetes, your body
completely stops producing any insulin, a hormone that lets your body use glucose found
in foods for energy. People with Type I diabetes must take daily insulin injections to
survive. This form of diabetes usually develops in children or young adults, but can
happen at any age. In Type II diabetes, the body produces insulin, but not enough to
properly convert food into energy. This form of diabetes usually occurs in people who are
over 40, overweight, and have a family history of diabetes.
People with diabetes often experience symptoms. Some of the symptoms are:
1)being very thirsty
2)having to go to the bathroom very frequently
3)weight loss
4)increased hunger
5)blurry vision
6)skin infections
7)wounds that don't heal
8)and/or extreme unexplained fatigue
In some cases, there are no symptoms, this happens at times with Type II diabetes. In
this case, people can live for months, even years without knowing they have the disease.
This form of diabetes comes on so gradually that symptoms might not even be recognized.
Diabetes can occur in anyone. However, people who have close relatives with the disease
are somewhat more likely to develop it. The risk of getting diabetes also increases as
people grow older. People who are over 40 and overweight are more likely to get diabetes.
So are people of African-American, Hispanic or Asian heritage. Also, people who develop
diabetes while pregnant are more likely to develop full-blown diabetes later in life.
There are certain things that everyone who has diabetes, whether Type I or Type II,
needs to do to be healthy. You need to have an eating plan. You need to pay attention to
how much you exercise, because exercise can help your body use insulin better to convert
glucose into energy for cells. Everyone with Type I diabetes, and some people with Type
II diabetes, also need to take insulin injections. Some people with Type II diabetes take
pills called "oral agents" which help their bodies produce more insulin and/or use the
insulin it is producing better. Some people with Type II diabetes can control their
disease with weight loss, diet and exercise alone and don't need any medication.
Everyone who has diabetes should be seen at least once every six months by a diabetes
specialist. You should also be seen periodically by other members of a diabetes treatment
team, including a diabetes nurse educator, and a diabetes dietitian educator who helps
you develop a meal plan that works best for you. Ideally , you should also see an
exercise physiologist for help in developing an exercise plan, and if you think you need
it, a social worker, psychologist or other mental health professional for help with the
stresses and challenges of living with a chronic disease. Everyone who has diabetes
should have regular eye exams at least once a year by an ophthalmologist to make sure
that any eye problems associated with diabetes are caught early, and treated before they
become serious.
Also, people with diabetes need to learn how to monitor their blood sugars day-to-day at
home using home blood sugar monitoring. This daily testing, which your diabetes educator
can explain to you, will help you see how well your meal plan, exercise, and medication
are working to keep your blood sugars in a normal range.
Your health care team will encourage you to follow your meal plan and exercise program,
use your medications and monitor your blood sugars regularly to keep your blood sugars in
as normal a range as possible as much of the time as possible. Why is this so important?
Because poorly managed diabetes can lead to a host of long-term complications among them
are heart attacks, strokes, blindness, kidney failure, blood vessel disease that requires
an amputation, nerve damage, and impotence in men.
But happily, a recent nationwide study completed over a 10-year period showed that if
people keep their blood sugars as close to normal as possible, they can reduce their risk
of developing some of these complications by 50 percent or more.
A study being conducted at Joslin Diabetes Center and several other sites nationwide is
screening the immediate relatives of someone with Type I diabetes because we can now
identify those who will develop this form of the disease as much as five or more years in
advance.
Type II diabetes is the most common type of diabetes, yet we still do not understand it
very well. But recent research does suggest that there are some things you can do to
prevent this form of diabetes, particularly if it runs in your family, or if you have had
gestational diabetes, or if you are a member of an ethnic group that is more prone to
this disease.
In simplest terms, to prevent or slow the development of Type II diabetes you should try
to maintain your weight in as normal a range as possible. If you are overweight, lose
weight. And, try to develop a regular exercise program, as the exercise will help your
body use insulin more effectively.
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