24
May

ABOUT TYPE 2 DIABETES?

Author: admin

In type 2, we know that the reason (not the cause) is because:
1- not correct insulin secretion (either in quantity and/or timing)
2- Body cells declining to use insulin to consume the blood glucose

Now my question is:
Are those 2 conditions as mentioned above fixed, should come together or can be separate. Meaning can a diabetic type 2 someone have either of them or he should be having both always

this is v


Answer:
Insulin resistance, you #2 will effect #1.

With today's accepted high carbohydrate diet it is projected that by the year 2025 there will be over 300 million diabetics planet wide. It is just not the diet our bodies evolved with.

Carbohydrates are simply long chains of sugar molecules hooked end-to-end. When a person eats carbohydrates their normal digestive process breaks up these chains into the individual sugar molecules, and they pass right through the intestinal wall into the bloodstream, and load up the bloodstream with sugar.

If this happened each once in a while it wouldn’t be a problem. But as diets today are so high in carbohydrates, people have a constant high level of sugar pouring into their bloodstream year after year!

This requires their body to continuously produce high levels of insulin to keep that sugar level down. (Insulin’s job is to push sugar out of the bloodstream into the cells where it is used for energy.)

Eventually the cells in their body becomes insensitive to the effects of the insulin (insulin resistance). To handle this problem of insulin resistance their body begins to produce even higher levels of insulin. This continues until their pancreas reaches the maximum amount of insulin it can produce, and when the insulin resistance increases again, their blood sugar begins to rise out of control.

The result is type 2 diabetes! Type 2 diabetes is actually an extreme case of insulin resistance.


Answer:
The 2 conditions are always there as the cause of type 2 diabetes ,no much insulin usage that’s why there is excessive urination, excessive thirst, and excessive appetite.

Answer:
By definition in diabetes, rule 1 has to be present. (type 1 or type 2).

Type 2 diabetes consists of rule 2 occurring first.


Answer:
it might be both.

This entry was posted on Sunday, May 24th, 2009 at 2:22 am and is filed under Diabetes. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or TrackBack URI from your own site.

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