Diabetes
Information
(From the Centers
for Disease Control)
What is diabetes?
Most
of the food we eat is turned into glucose, or sugar, for our
bodies to use for energy. The pancreas, an organ that lies
near the stomach, makes a hormone called insulin to help glucose
get into the cells of our bodies.
When you have diabetes, your body either doesn't make enough
insulin or can't use its own insulin as well as it should.
This causes sugars to build up in your blood.
Diabetes
can cause serious health complications including heart disease,
blindness, kidney failure, and lower-extremity amputations.
Diabetes is the seventh leading cause of death in the United
States.
What
are the symptoms of diabetes?
People
who think they might have diabetes must visit a physician
for diagnosis.
They
might have SOME or NONE of the following symptoms:
- Frequent
urination
- Excessive
thirst
- Unexplained
weight loss
- Extreme
hunger
- Sudden
vision changes
- Tingling
or numbness in hands or feet
- Feeling
very tired much of the time
- Very
dry skin
- Sores
that are slow to heal More infections than usual.
Nausea,
vomiting, or stomach pains may accompany some of these symptoms
in the abrupt onset of insulin-dependent diabetes, now called
type 1 diabetes.
What are the types and risk factors of diabetes?
The
following types of diabetes and some of their risk factors
are quoted from the National Diabetes Fact Sheet: National
estimates and general information on diabetes in the United
States (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Atlanta,
GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, 1997):
Type 1 diabetes was previously called insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus (IDDM) or juvenile-onset diabetes. Type
1 diabetes may account for 5% to 10% of all diagnosed cases
of diabetes.
Risk
factors are less well defined for type 1 diabetes than for
type 2 diabetes, but autoimmune, genetic, and environmental
factors are involved in the development of this type of diabetes.
Type
2 diabetes was previously called non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) or adult-onset diabetes. Type 2
diabetes may account for about 90% to 95% of all diagnosed
cases of diabetes.
Risk
factors for type 2 diabetes include older age, obesity, family
history of diabetes, prior history of gestational diabetes,
impaired glucose tolerance, physical inactivity, and race/ethnicity.
African
Americans, Hispanic/Latino Americans, American Indians, and
some Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are at particularly
high risk for type 2 diabetes.
Gestational
diabetes develops in 2% to 5% of all pregnancies but usually
disappears when a pregnancy is over. Gestational diabetes
occurs more frequently in African Americans, Hispanic/Latino
Americans, American Indians, and people with a family history
of diabetes than in other groups.
Obesity
is also associated with higher risk. Women who have had gestational
diabetes are at increased risk for later developing type 2
diabetes.
In
some studies, nearly 40% of women with a history of gestational
diabetes developed diabetes in the future. Other specific
types of diabetes result from specific genetic syndromes,
surgery, drugs, malnutrition, infections, and other illnesses.
Such
types of diabetes may account for 1% to 2% of all diagnosed
cases of diabetes.
What
is the treatment for diabetes?
Management strategies should be planned along with a qualified
health care team. The following information on treatments
for diabetes is from the National Diabetes Fact Sheet: National
estimates and general information on diabetes in the United
States (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Atlanta,
GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, 1997):
Diabetes
knowledge, treatment, and prevention strategies advance daily.
Treatment is aimed at keeping blood glucose near normal levels
at all times. Training in self-management is integral to the
treatment of diabetes. Treatment must be individualized and
must address medical, psychosocial, and lifestyle issues.
Treatment of type 1 diabetes: Lack of insulin production
by the pancreas makes type 1 diabetes particularly difficult
to control. Treatment requires a strict regimen that typically
includes a carefully calculated diet, planned physical activity,
home blood glucose testing several times a day, and multiple
daily insulin injections.
Treatment
of type 2 diabetes: Treatment typically includes diet
control, exercise, home blood glucose testing, and in some
cases, oral medication and/or insulin. Approximately 40% of
people with type 2 diabetes require insulin injections.
What
causes type 1 diabetes? The causes of type 1 diabetes
appear to be much different than those for type 2 diabetes,
though the exact mechanisms for development of both diseases
are unknown. The appearance of type 1 diabetes is suspected
to follow exposure to an "environmental trigger," such as
an unidentified virus, stimulating an immune attack against
the beta cells of the pancreas (that produce insulin) in some
genetically predisposed people.
Can
diabetes be prevented? A number of studies have shown
that regular physical activity can significantly reduce the
risk of developing type 2 diabetes. It also appears to be
associated with obesity.
Researchers are making progress in identifying the exact genetics
and "triggers" that predispose some individuals to develop
type 1 diabetes, but prevention, as well as a cure, remains
elusive.
Is
there a cure for diabetes? In response to the growing
health burden of diabetes mellitus (diabetes), the diabetes
community has three choices: prevent diabetes; cure diabetes;
and take better care of people with diabetes to prevent devastating
complications.
All
three approaches are actively being pursued by the US Department
of Health and Human Services. Both the National Institutes
of Health (NIH) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) are involved in prevention activities.
The NIH is involved in research to cure both type 1 and type
2 diabetes, especially type 1. CDC focuses most of its programs
on being sure that the proven science is put into daily practice
for people with diabetes. The basic idea is that if all the
important research and science are not made meaningful in
the daily lives of people with diabetes, then the research
is, in essence, wasted.
Several
approaches to "cure" diabetes are being pursued:
- Pancreas
transplantation
- Islet
cell transplantation (islet cells produce insulin)
- Artificial
pancreas development Genetic manipulation (fat or muscle
cells that don’t normally make insulin have a human insulin
gene inserted — then these "pseudo" islet cells are transplanted
into people with type 1 diabetes).
Each of these approaches still has a lot of challenges, such
as preventing immune rejection; finding an adequate number
of insulin cells; keeping cells alive; and others. But progress
is being made in all areas.
Related
Sites:
Juvenile
Diabetes Foundation
American
Diabetes Association
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