|
||||
| books about juvenile diabetes | ||||
|
|
All about books about juvenile diabetesTips and articles about books about juvenile diabetes:
Related articlesA Youthful Approach to the Fight Against Diabetes(NC)-The desire to be thinner can lead to extreme weight control behaviour in girls and young women. Girls with type I diabetes mellitus (DM) appear to be at risk for disturbed eating. Dr. Gary M. Rodin, and colleagues at the Toronto Hospital for Sick Children, will study 120 adolescent girls with DM for 3 years, to assess their eating attitudes and behaviour, family functioning, and medical status. The goal is to learn about eating disturbances in this group and identify risk factors for early warning signs in order to design an intervention to prevent the development of eating disturbances .... [more]Understanding DiabetesTo manage diabetes, it helps to understand how it affects your body. In healthy people, the body turns food into glucose (blood sugar) to use for energy. Insulin, produced by the pancreas, is the hormone responsible for shuttling glucose into the body's cells where it is either used right away or stored for later use. With diabetes, however, high levels of glucose build up in the blood because either the pancreas doesn't produce enough insulin or the body can't use the insulin it produces. Your treatment will depend on which problem you have.Diabetes is broken down into three categories: type 1 or type 2 or gestational.
[more]
What is Diabetes?Diabetes is a disorder of metabolism the way our bodies use digested food for growth and energy. Most of the food we eat is broken down into glucose, the form of sugar in the blood.Glucose is the main source of fuel for the body. Diabetes causes glucose to back up in the bloodstream. As more and more glucose remains in the bloodstream blood glucose or blood sugar levels can rise too high. There are two major types of diabetes. Consider the following information as it relates to both type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes. In type 1 diabetes (also called juvenile-onset diabetes or insulin-dependent diabetes), the body completely stops producing any insulin. Insulin is a hormone that enables the body to use glucose to produce energy. Sufferers of type 1 diabetes must take daily insulin injections in order to survive.
[more]
Related pages on this site:borderline diabetic dietborderline diabetic medical diet borderline diabetic recipes british diabetic association brittle diabetic |
|
||
|
copyright © 2005, 2006, 2007 - www.diabetic-supplies-online.biz
|
||||