The Canadian Diabetes Association and member associations across Canada have and continue to understand the value of funding diabetes research. It is such a crucial step in providing these advances and each year the Canadian Diabetes Association funds Canada’s most renowned scientists and clinicians in their quest for new and innovative developments in the prevention, treatment, and management of diabetes all of which every study and researcher remain the same – to improve the quality of life of…
Background: A common concern in patients with impaired glucose tolerance and type 2 diabetes is the increased risk of developing ischaemic heart disease. Studies have shown a noteworthy relationship between glucose intolerance/diabetes and heart disease a mere 3554% of patients with this heart disease have normal glucose tolerance. While doctors may prescribe drugs, lifestyle changes or dietary restrictions to help control concerning glucose levels, there are many confounding variables that make…
Diabetes is a very complex disease and catastrophic health problem in the world. There are an estimated 387 million people have diabetes worldwide, by 2035 will rise to reach 600 million (CDC, 2014). In every country have number of people with type 2 diabetes is increasing. This significance increase expected to take place in both developing nations and developed nations. According to National Diabetes Statistics Report 2014, points out 29.1 million or 9.3% of the population have suffer from…
genetics and contact with specific environmental factors like viruses might cause the disease. Cause of Type 2 Diabetes: Type 2 diabetes develops when the body becomes resistant to insulin or when the pancreas stops producing insulin. Why this happens is unknown. Although, environmental and genetic factors like excess weight and inactivity can trigger the disease. Similarities: Type 1 and type 2 diabetes both can be triggered by genetic and environmental factors. Symptoms…
in between the range of 80-180 so I was way up there. It just felt like I needed it to play out and see what happens. I was coming up on my 2 year honeymoon ending period and I qualified for an insulin pump. That’s when I felt like a pump would really come in handy with managing my blood…
usually called type 2 diabetes. 1. Beginnings In 1552 B.C, Hesy-Ra who was an Egyptian internal medicine doctor recorded frequently urination as a symptom of a incomprehensible disease that also caused weakness. Also around this time, ancient healers attended that ants seemed to be interested in the urine of people who had this illness. Arateus who was the Greek internal medicine doctor described what we now call diabetes as "the melting down of flesh into urine in 150 AD. 2. Early Treatments…
diabetes has no idea that they have the condition. This increases the odds of development of complications which can be dangerous. Leading a healthy lifestyle is one of the appropriate strategies that can be utilized in preventing and treatment of Type 2 diabetes and even more specifically eating a high fiber diet is emerging as a primary strategy a person can use to lower their risks (Tahrani, Bailey, Del Prato, and Barnett, 2011). A high intake of dietary fiber has been emphasized by numerous…
Of all the diabetes, type 2 is the most common, accounting for 90 to 95% of all cases of diabetes. There is insufficient production of insulin by the pancreas. The disease process associated with type 2 diabetes include insulin resistance, where the fat, muscle, and liver cells do not use insulin to carry glucose into the body’s cells to use for energy. As a result, the body requires more insulin to help glucose move in the cells. At first, the pancreas is able to keep up with the added demand…
One non-communicable disease is Diabetes. Diabetes is a metabolic disease in which the body’s inability to produce any or enough insulin this causes elevated levels of glucose in the blood. How is Diabetes contracted? Well it all starts with the pancreas, one of the pancreases functions is to manufacture a hormone (insulin) and secrete the hormone into the bloodstream. When we eat our food like carbs, fats, and proteins it gets broken down in our intestine and then absorbed into the…
Type 1 diabetes (TD1), also known as juvenile diabetes or insulin-dependent diabetes, is a chronic condition in which the pancreas produces little to no insulin. Type 1 differs from type 2 by which the pancreas in type 2 produces insulin, but the body resists its effects. Insulin is an important hormone needed to allow sugar to enter cells to produce energy. Type 1 diabetes occurs by autoimmune-mediated destruction of insulin-producing β-cells in the pancreas, and genome-wide association studies…