Everything You Need To Know About Diabetes.

Saturday  21 Nov 2020 06:59 PM

Diabetes mellitus, commonly known as diabetes, is a metabolic disease that causes high blood sugar. The hormone insulin moves sugar from the blood into your cells to be stored or used for energy. With diabetes, your body either doesn’t make enough insulin or can’t effectively use the insulin it does make. Untreated high blood sugar from diabetes can damage your nerves, eyes, kidneys, and other organs. There are a few different types of diabetes:
   * Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease. The immune system attacks and destroys cells in the pancreas, where insulin is made. It’s unclear what causes this attack. About 10 percent of people with diabetes have this type.
   * Type 2 diabetes occurs when your body becomes resistant to insulin, and sugar builds up in your blood.
   * Prediabetes occurs when your blood sugar is higher than normal, but it’s not high enough for a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes.
   * Gestational diabetes is high blood sugar during pregnancy. Insulin-blocking hormones produced by the placenta cause this type of diabetes.
A rare condition called diabetes insipidus is not related to diabetes mellitus, although it has a similar name. It’s a different condition in which your kidneys remove too much fluid from your body. Each type of diabetes has unique symptoms, causes, and treatments. Learn more about how these types differ from one another.

Symptoms of diabetes

Diabetes symptoms are caused by rising blood sugar. General symptoms The general symptoms of diabetes include:
1 increased hunger
2 increased thirst
3 weight loss
4 frequent urination
5 blurry vision
6 extreme fatigue
7 sores that don’t heal

Diabetes complications

High blood sugar damages organs and tissues throughout your body. The higher your blood sugar is and the longer you live with it, the greater your risk for complications. Complications associated with diabetes include:
1 Heart disease, heart attack, and stroke
2 neuropathy
3 nephropathy
4 retinopathy and vision loss
5 hearing loss
6 foot damage such as infections and sores that don’t heal
7 skin conditions such as bacterial and fungal infections
8 Depression
9 Dementia

Last modified on Saturday,  04 Dec 2021 07:46 PM
By - Sherin