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Understanding and dealing with Diabetes
Jul 06, 2003 12:20 PM 3588 Views
(Updated Jul 06, 2003 12:20 PM)

A year ago I was diagnosed with'early' diabetes of the second type. It is also called Adult onset diabetes and happens to people in their 30's onwards. Since the diagnosis I have spent a lot of time doing research on causes, prevention and containment. Indians are among the most diabetes prone race in the world and I feel it is very important that I share this information with you.


What is diabetes?


There is a clinical definition and then I realized after doing a lot of research and reading that there is a functional definition. Diabetes is diagnosed by measurement and symptoms. However Diabetes the disease onsets much earlier.


Here is what diabetes is


a). The body does not produce or produces too little


insulin and therefore there is no way of transporting


all the sugar in your bloodstream to your cells. This


leads to a large ammount of sugar circulating in your


blood


b). The body produces enough insulin but the insulin does


not efficiently transport the sugar to your cell. The


malfunctioning of Insulin happens in stages as follows




  1. The blood sugar levels are in control, because the




islet cells of the Pancreas produce large ammounts


of insulin(far more than a normal person would need)


to transport the glucose from the blood to the cells


The only way of detecting this is a Serrum Insulin


test done after fasting for 8 hrs and if you get


a high Insulin count you are on your way. This is


the last preventable stage because you can do diet


and exercise to get back the insulin efficiency.




  1. The insulin efficiency becomes worse, so now the




large ammount of insulin that the islet cells of


the pancreas produce are not enough to transport


all the sugar in the cells. This is when your blood


glucose levels start showing up in your lab cells


The doctor typically prescribes metformin at this


stage, a medication that enables the body to use


the insulin more efficiently and coupled with diet


and exercise you can prevent further degeneration.




  1. Overproduction of Insulin start burning out the




islet cells in the Pancreas thus causing less and


less insulin to be produced and even this insulin


which is produced because of 2) does not work very


well. The doctor now has to prescribe a sulfonurea


medication which will induce the pancreas to produce


more insulin and which along with Metformin will


enable the efficient use of the Insulin thus


produced.




  1. The final stage is when all insulin ceases to be




produced even with sulfonurea inducement. Now the


only option is to use Insulin directly and club it


with metformin for better absorption.


The key to diabetes management is to determine which


of these 4 stages you are in and ensure that there is


enough diet and exercise in your life everyday so you


can slow the progress to the next stage and even prevent


it.


Another thing one needs to know about is the glycemic


Index of all the carbohydrate foods that one eats. In


lay terms, GI is a measure of how quickly sugar rises


in the blood as a result of eating a particular type of


carbohydrate(all carbohydrates are metabolized in the


body as sugar). Since insulin action is not very


efficient in the body, the more slowly the sugar rises


in the blood the easier it will be for glucose


metabolism and thus transport of sugar to the cells.


The rule of thumb is use as many low GI foods as possible and as few high GI foods. Typically fibrous foods


are lower in GI and refined foods are higher. With the


exception of Pineapple, Mangoes and Bananas, most fruits


have a low GI even though they have high sugar


content. The high GI ones would be potatoes, white


bread, anything made of refined flour etc. Chapathis


and rice have the same GI so one is not better than the


other(contrary to popular belief). If you have a high


GI food have it with something like Oats. The sugar


absorption I have noticed is much lower.


Finally daily exercise improves insulin efficiency


and I have noticed the effect lasts for 48 hours easily.


Hope this helps


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