Monday, June 1, 2009

Medication For Diabetes

Medication For Diabetes

There are now several medications available to treat diabetes. Most are taken in pill form. Different diabetes pills do different things:

  • Help the pancreas make more insulin
  • Help the body's cells use insulin more efficiently
  • Work with both the pancreas and the cells to control blood sugar levels
  • Slows down the digestion of carbohydrates in the food we eat causing the rise of glucose   Commonly referred to as sugar, it is the major source of energy used by the body's cells. It is taken from foods we eat and can be made from protein. in the blood following a meal to be less.

In order to help your diabetes medication work well, remember these points:

  • You may start off with one type of medication and change or add others later.
  • Keep taking your medication as directed by your doctor even if you feel better.
  • Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you experience side effects or a change in your condition.

Side Effects

Diabetes medications may cause side effects, including

  • Stomach upset
  • Gas
  • Bloating
  • Diarrhea
  • Metallic tast
  • Less appetite

These side effects usually go away on their own in a week or two. If they don't go away, tell your doctor. He or she can probably switch you to a different medication or change your dose.

There's plenty you can do to help diabetes medication work correctly:

  • Follow the directions for taking medication.
  • Follow your treatment team's advice about when to eat meals and what to eat to help control your blood sugar.
  • Carry emergency snacks in case the medication causes your blood sugar to drop too low. Low blood sugar can be dangerous.
  • Get regular liver tests if required for your type of medication.

How-To Information:

Know Your Medication

Whenever you get a new prescription from the doctor, make sure you know all the details about your medication. Copy this questionnaire and bring it with you to your doctor's appointment. Be sure you understand the answers to all these questions before you leave the doctor's office

Medication Questions

  • What is the name of the medication?
  • When should I take it?
  • Should I take it before, with, or after meals?
  • Are there any other special directions for taking this medication?
  • If I forget a dose, should I take it later, or skip it?
  • What side effects are common with this medication?
  • What side effects should I tell the doctor about?
  • Are there any blood tests or other checks I need to have while taking this medication?

Types Of Medication

There are several types of medication commonly used to treat type 2 diabetes:

  • Sulfonylureas Stimulate your pancreas to make more insulin.
  • Biguanides Decrease the amount of glucose made by your liver.
  • Alpha-glucosidase inhibitors Slow the absorption of the starches you eat.
  • Thiazolidinediones Make you more sensitive to insulin.
  • Meglitinides Stimulate your pancreas to make more insulin.
  • D-phenylalanine Help your pancreas make more insulin quickly.
  • Combination oral medicines. A combination of different types of pills.

How-To Information:

Remembering Your Pills

It's very important to take your diabetes pills regularly, even if you feel better.

  • Buy a pill organizer with a compartment for every day of the week. Load it up once a week. (Include any other pills you are taking regularly, such as pills to control cholesterol or blood pressure.)
  • Keep your pills where you can see them easily, for example, on your bedside table or near where you eat.
  • Ask a family member to remind you about your pills.
  • When traveling, put a note in your luggage reminding you to take the pills. Carry a spare prescription, in case you lose the pills. Be sure to locate a pharmacy near where you are staying in case you have a medication question or need to fill a prescription.
  • Fill prescriptions well before you run out of medicine, especially if you'll be going on vacation or around the holidays.
  • If you have side effects, talk to your doctor. But don't stop taking the pills without your doctor's permission.



http://www.ehealthmd.com/library/diabadults/DIA_medication.html

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Diabetes Prevention

Is it possible to delay or even prevent type 2 diabetes from ever developing? Yes it is. There is a lot you can do yourself to know your risks for pre-diabetes and to take action to prevent diabetes if you have, or are at risk for, pre-diabetes.

Pre-diabetes
Before people develop type 2 diabetes, they almost always have "pre-diabetes" -- blood glucose levels that are higher than normal but not yet high enough to be diagnosed as diabetes. There are 57 million people in the United States who have pre-diabetes.

Diabetes Risk Test
Take our diabetes risk test to see if you are at risk for developing diabetes. Diabetes is more common in African Americans, Latinos, Native Americans, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. If you are a member of one of these ethnic groups, you need to pay special attention to this test.

Diabetes PHD: Health Risk Calculator
Diabetes PHD (Personal Health Decisions) is a powerful new risk assessment tool. It can be used to explore the effects of a wide variety of health care interventions, including losing weight, stopping smoking, and taking certain medications.

How to prevent or delay diabetes
Pre-diabetes is a serious medical condition that can be treated. The good news is that the recently completed Diabetes Prevention Program study conclusively showed that people with pre-diabetes can prevent the development of type 2 diabetes by making changes in their diet and increasing their level of physical activity.

Diabetes, Your Heart & Your Health / CheckUp America
Certain health problems (including being overweight, unhealthy cholesterol, smoking, high blood glucose, high blood pressure, and physical inactivity) put you at higher risk for diabetes and heart disease. Keeping an eye on these problems -- keeping them "in check" -- can help you prevent diabetes and heart disease.

http://www.diabetes.org/diabetes-prevention.jsp

Cure for Type 1 Diabetes Gets Closer

Pancreatic Transplant cures rats’ type 2 diabetes mellitus without need for antirejection medication : Sept. 12, 2006

A medical technique proven to cure a rat with type 1 or juvenile-onset diabetes mellitus was also effective for a rat of type 2, also known as adult-onset diabetes, according to a new report from doctors at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

Commenting on the possiblity of a cure for diabetes:

“Finding that we can cure type 2 diabetes in the same way is very significant because in humans type 2 diabetes is almost 20 times more prevalent than type 1 diabetes,” says senior author Marc R. Hammerman, M.D., the Chromalloy Professor of Renal Diseases in Medicine. “There are about 200 million type 2 diabetics worldwide, and the incidence is rapidly increasing.”

The technique in question transplants precursors of the pancreas from pig embryos. In a previous study, Hammerman and co-developer Sharon A. Rogers,proved that they were able to transplant the pancreatic cells in a way that lets them transform into healthy insulin producing cells that do not trigger attacks by the rats’ immune systems. This cured the rats’ diabetes without needing immunosuppressive drugs vital to prevent rejection in other transplant-based treatments. This is a major break though in the search for a cure for diabetes.

Hammerman and Rogers are leaders in the revolutionary field of organogenesis, which focuses on growing organs from stem cells and other embryonic cell clusters known as ‘organ primordia’. Unlike embryonic stem cells, which may transform into any cell type, primordia are locked into changing to cells of a exact organ.

Their system of diabetes treatment makes use of pancreatic primordia from pigs. In previous studies, they established that taking the primordia when the pigs were young caused them to be “invisible” to the immune defense system, meaning there was no need for immunosuppression medication.

In the latest study they transplanted the pig primordia into a strain of rat with a malady that closely resembles human type 2 diabetes.

The outcome was just the same - the diabetes was cured without needing immunosuppression drugs.

Although it is not yet time to state that this will lead to a cure for diabetes in humans, it is a enormous stride in the right direction.

Introduction to diabetes

PostHeaderIcon Information about Diabetes : What is Diabetes?

Diabetes is a chronic condition that affects over 150 million people in the world today.

The percentage of people suffering from diabetes is increasing rapidly, to the point where many medical authorities are referring to it as an epidemic.

So what is diabetes?

Diabetes prevents your body from turning your food into energy. Instead glucose stays in your bloodstream, and left untreated can result in a range of complications.

If you have recently been diagnosed as diabetic, don’t worry. With proper treatment and care, you will lead a normal and happy life. You may need to make a few changes in your lifestyle - but then, if you are like me, you probably had plans to do that anyway and just never got round to it.

Now is the time to kick yourself into action. You cannot leave this up to your doctor alone - it needs you to take responsibility for your own treatment, and that starts with understanding what you are dealing with.

There are three types of Diabetes:



What is Type 1 Diabetes?

Type 1 Diabetes, (sometimes called Juvenile Diabetes) is usually found in young children and teenagers, but can also occur later in life.

In Type 1 Diabetes, your body is not producing insulin, a hormone needed to convert blood sugar into energy. Normally this hormone is produced by cells in your pancreas, but for some reason this is not happening as it should.

As the glucose in your blood can’t be converted into energy and absorbed by your cells, it builds up causing high blood sugar.

Left untreated, high blood sugar can cause serious long-term health problems.

The normal treatment for people with type 1 diabetes is daily injections of insulin which keeps the blood sugar level within normal ranges.

Finding out you have diabetes can be upsetting, but it should not prevent you from living a long and happy life.

If you think this condition will prevent you leading an active life, consider Sir Steve Redgrave, one of the World’s greatest Olympic athletes.

Sir Steve battled type 1 diabetes to win his record-breaking fifth Olympic Gold medal at the Sydney games in the coxless fours rowing event!


PostHeaderIcon What is Type 2 Diabetes?

Type 2 diabetes (sometimes called mature onset diabetes) is the most common form of diabetes.

As with Type 1 Diabetes, the problem is related to insulin, a hormone needed to convert sugar into energy.

With Type 2 diabetes your body might be producing too little insulin, or it might not be reacting to the insulin correctly. Either way, the end result is that glucose builds up in the bloodstream instead of going into the cells. Left untreated, high blood sugar can cause serious long-term health problems.

Type 2 diabetes usually appears later in life, often between the ages of 35-45 years. As it often develops slowly, many people may not recognise the symptoms, and may have diabetes without knowing it.

If you have recently been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, you are one of the lucky ones. Many people have diabetes without knowing it, and are at much greater risk of long term medical complications.

Finding out you have diabetes can be upsetting, but it should not prevent you from living a long and happy life. You may need to make a few changes in your lifestyle, but these changes are also good advice for non-diabetics, so probably a good idea anyway.


PostHeaderIcon What is Gestational Diabetes?

Gestational diabetes is a type of diabetes, that is only suffered by pregnant women.

In Gestational diabetes, a woman’s blood sugar is higher than normal because of the other hormones pridcued during preganancy interfere with the insulin that is produced naturally.

Gestational diabetes usually becomes apparent during the 24th to 28th weeks of pregnancy, and, in most cases, disappears of its own accord once the baby is born.

Women with gestational diabetes usually do NOT have an increased risk of having a baby with birth defects.

Generally, sufferers of gestational diabetes have normal blood sugar levels during the critical first stages of the preganancy.
Whilst there can be complications caused by gestational diabetes, these can usually be managed by careful attention to nutrition and blood sugar levels.

Approximately 3 to 5 percent of all pregnant women in the developed world suffer from gestational diabetes.


PostHeaderIcon Symptoms of Diabetes - how to tell if you are diabetic

What are the main Symptoms of Diabetes?

diabetes symptoms warningThe most consistent symptom of diabetes mellitus (Type I and II) is elevated blood sugar levels. In Type I (insulin dependent / early onset) diabetes, this is caused by the body not producing enough insulin to properly regulate blood sugar. In Type II (non insulin dependent/adult onset) diabetes, it is caused by the body developing resistance to insulin, so it cannot properly use what it produces.

However, high blood sugar is not something you can see in the mirror at home, so it is useful to know the side-effects of high blood sugar, which are commonly recognized as the noticeable symptoms of diabetes.

If you find yourself experiencing many of these diabetes symptoms on a consistent, long term basis, you should visit a doctor to be tested for diabetes. Ignoring (or not recognizing) the symptoms of diabetes can lead to long-term serious health risks and complications from untreated diabetes. Some of the common ‘early warning’ signs of diabetes are:

  • The first symptom of diabetes is often excessive thirst (unrelated to exercise, hot weather, or short-term illness)
  • Excessive hunger (you know you’ve eaten “enough” but are still hungry all the time)
  • Frequent urination (often noticed because you must wake up repeatedly during the night)
  • Tiredness and fatigue (possibly severe enough to make you fall asleep unexpectedly after meals), one of the most common symptoms of diabetes.
  • Rapid and/or sudden weight loss (any dramatic change in weight is a sign to visit a doctor)

While many of the signs and symptoms of diabetes can also be related to other causes, testing for diabetes is very easy, and the constant/regular presence of one or more of these symptoms over an extended period of time should be cause for a visit to the doctor.

If diabetes is suspected, tested for, and diagnosed when those symptoms first start appearing, other more serious symptoms of advanced diabetes can often be prevented or have their onset significantly delayed through diet, exercise and proper blood sugar management.

However, often the ‘minor’ symptoms of diabetes go unrecognized, and physical and neurological problems may arise, resulting in some
of the following symptoms:

  • Blurred vision (diabetes can lead to macular degeneration and eventual blindness)
  • Numbness and/or tingling in the hands and feet (peripheral neuropathy, a symptom of diabetes, causes nerve damage in the extremities)
  • Slow healing of minor scratches and wounds (diabetes often leads to impaired immune system function)
  • Recurrent or hard-to-treat yeast infections in women (another sign of impaired immune function)
  • Dry or itchy skin (peripheral neuropathy also affects circulation and proper sweat gland function)

If you are experiencing any of these symptoms on a regular basis, or you recognize these symptoms in a child or relative, they may be signs of untreated diabetes. A doctor’s appointment should be made as soon as possible, so the individual experiencing the symptoms can — if diabetes is diagnosed — take the steps needed to prevent more serious health problems.

Follow this link for more information on Symptoms of Diabetes

http://www.informationaboutdiabetes.com/

http://yourtotalhealth.ivillage.com/diabetes-endocrine

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