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Recognizing And Coping With Diabetes Signs

Once you start to notice diabetes signs, there is not much you can do to halt the development of diabetes. Your main goal will be how to manage diabetes and learning to live with it.

There is a lot that modern science has been able to explain about diabetes, but there is still much that is not fully understood. For example, how diabetes starts and why it affects some people not others. We do know that there are two identified types of the disease. The most life threatening is referred to as Type 1 diabetes. It is thought that hereditary factors influence likelihood of contracting this type. Type 2 diabetes is more pervasive in society and seems to be linked with lifestyle. This type of diabetes is slower to manifest and that fastest growing type to affect industrialized societies.

With both types of diabetes there have been a few patterns to emerge which are of interest to scientists. For example, it has been noticed that western cultures are more prone to diabetes than eastern countries, even where incomes and lifestyles are similar between the peoples. Trends have also shown that people with obesity issues are more likely to develop diabetes than those who are generally fit and avail themselves of a life enhancing diet from a young age. It has also been noted that people of African heritage are more likely to inherit or develop diabetes that the average in America.

So what are the usual diabetes signs? These include persistent tiredness, dry mouth and constant thirst, unusual weight loss and increased frequency in urination. If these symptoms attack a patient very suddenly, it is usually an indicator of Type 1 diabetes. However, the symptoms can manifest very slowly indeed and very often escape the notice of a patient. This is usually the Type 2 diabetes which is often only detected once the patient reports for investigation into other ‘unrelated’ medical conditions.

Diabetes management affects different people in different ways depending on the type they have and the degree to which it has developed. Most of us think of insulin injections as a necessary part of the diabetic’s daily regime. For many this is actually the case and some have learned to administer the injections themselves so as to be able to lead a normal a life as possible. Others do not need injections and oral medication may be enough or simply a strictly controlled diet in which sugar consumption is carefully regulated.

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