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Featured Diabetes Articles

Diabetes: Breast-feeding May Help Babies and Women Against Diabetes
Babies and women may be protected against developing diabetes disease through breast feeding, according to new research. This current study states that the longer women nursed, the lower their risks of developing diabetes. Diabetes as a medical disorder ...

Take Control of Diabetes by Avoiding these 5 Common Mistakes
(ARA) - If you are one of the 17 million people in the United States who has diabetes, you know that careful monitoring of your blood sugar and ongoing treatment are critical to your health. By keeping your blood sugar as close to normal as possible, you ...

The Subconscious Diet" Can Help Protect Your Child From Type 2 Diabetes
Until obesity became epidemic, type 2 diabetes was virtually unheard of in children and teens. It was originally called "adult-onset" because it was mainly seen after middle age. At least 9 million American children are seriously overweight and another 9 ...





Coping with Diabetes
 
Every day, in the United States, more than 2000 new cases of diabetes are diagnosed. Type II diabetes, the most prevalent form of diabetes worldwide, often shows few or even no symptoms!
After eating, food is broken down into what is known as glucose, a sugar carried by the blood to cells throughout the body. Using a hormone known as insulin, made in the pancreas, cells process glucose into energy.
Because cells in the muscles, liver, and fat do not use insulin properly in the body of a person with type II diabetes, they have problems converting food into energy. Eventually, the pancreas cannot make enough insulin for the body's needs. The amount of glucose in the body increases, and the cells are starved of energy.
This starvation of the cells, paired with the high blood glucose level can damage nerves and blood vessels. This leads to complications such as kidney disease, nerve problems, blindness, and heart ailments.
There are a lot of factors that can help to attribute to diabetes cases - lifestyle, environment, heredity - and those who are at risk should be screened regularly to prevent diabetes. Those that are already diagnosed with diabetes should aim to keep their glucose level under control.
But how do you know if you have type II diabetes? After all, it has few symptoms, often no symptoms in some patients. However, if you notice an increased thirst or hunger, a change in weight, or blurred vision, getting tested for type II diabetes is necessary, as only your doctor will be able to help you find the treatment steps necessary to being able to manage your life with diabetes.
Simple changes such as eating right, managing your weight, and keeping your blood sugar level under control may be enough. However, you doctor may prescribe diabetes-regulating medications to assist you in controlling your type II diabetes.
Diabetes is a serious ailment with extreme consequences if it isn't treated properly. But if you follow your doctor's advice and maintain both your lifestyle and blood sugar levels, you can help to prevent the more serious consequences from occurring.
This article is for information purposes only and is not meant to treat, diagnose or prevent any ailment or disease. See your physician for proper diagnosis and treatment.

About The Author

Amanda Baker writes for http://tobeinformed.com - a website for health, fitness and wellness.

Diabetes News



MedPage Today

Guideline: Diabetes Treatment Should Start with Metformin
MedPage Today
By Kristina Fiore, Staff Writer, MedPage Today Note that in a new guideline, the American College of Physicians (ACP) recommends monotherapy with metformin as the initial pharmacologic therapy for most patients with type 2 diabetes.
Metformin Preferred Drug for Type 2 Diabetes, Experts SayHealth.com
ACP Guideline Addresses Pharmacotherapy of Type 2 DiabetesMedscape
Oral Drug Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A Clinical Practice Guideline ...Annals of Internal Medicine
Cardiovascular Business
all 21 news articles »

Chris Carmichael Cycling to Stop Diabetes(R)
MarketWatch (press release)
ALEXANDRIA, VA, Feb 07, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- The American Diabetes Association is teaming up with Chris Carmichael and challenging riders to be part of the movement to Stop Diabetes(R) by participating in the 21st Annual Tour de Cure(R), ...

and more »

The West Australian

Diabetes linked to higher rate of birth defects
Medical Xpress
(Medical Xpress) -- Pregnant women with diabetes are almost four times more likely to have a baby with a birth defect than women without the condition and the likelihood is linked to the mother's glucose level, according to a new study.
Diabetes quadruples birth defects risk, say researchersBBC News
Diabetes 'raises birth defect risk'Nursing Times
Birth defects risk to diabetic mumsShields Gazette
HealthCanal.com -The West Australian -Times of India
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AFP

After diabetes diagnosis, US celebrity chef feels heat
AFP
WASHINGTON — US cooking star Paula Deen, self-proclaimed "Queen of Southern Cuisine" famous for her dishes smothered in butter, has met a storm of outrage after revealing she has diabetes and is hawking a drug to treat the disease.
Paula Deen talks diabetes, recent controversyFayetteville Observer
Honest Eats: Politics in the kitchenDaily News Transcript

all 12 news articles »

Modesto Bee

Rancho Cordova mom turns around big diabetes risk factor for Mexican Americans ...
Modesto Bee
Damage that pervasive is a common experience in the Mexican American community, which has some of the highest rates in a surge of diabetes nationwide. The disease can provoke heart attacks, high blood pressure, kidney failure and blindness, ...

and more »