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Diabetes – Introduction to Sweet Disease

Diabetes is a disease that is different from most other diseases for two important reasons. First, like hypertension, it can be a “silent killer.” That is, there are few symptoms until late in the disease, at which time it is usually too late to reverse the damage.

diabetes 1 thumb Diabetes – Introduction to Sweet Disease

Because of this lack of diabetes symptoms, people with diabetes, and too often their physicians, do not give it a high priority. This is one of the reasons that diabetes is the leading cause of blindness in people less than 74 years of age, the leading cause of dialysis (using machines to replace kidney function), and the major reason for amputations of toes, feet, and legs. All of this need not happen if glucose levels in people with diabetes could be kept to near-normal levels.

Second, people with diabetes must be actively involved in its treatment. For almost all other diseases, doctors prescribe medicines and the only responsibility for the patient is to take them appropriately. Not so with diabetes. Patients must carefully watch their diet, exercise more often, measure their own glucoses in many cases, and keep appointments in which preventive tests (e.g., measurements of albumin leakage into the urine) and examinations (e.g., dilated eye exams by qualified ophthalmologists) are carried out—all of this when patients feel fine. Therefore, people with diabetes must know a lot about their disease to stay motivated and to be able to make appropriate decisions that would minimize bad outcomes from this disease.

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About the Author: Dr.kut is a Physician and an Active Medical/Health Blogger and Loves to blog about current health events and current health articles.

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