Categories
- Global News Feed
- Uncategorized
- Alabama Stem Cells
- Alaska Stem Cells
- Arkansas Stem Cells
- Arizona Stem Cells
- California Stem Cells
- Colorado Stem Cells
- Connecticut Stem Cells
- Delaware Stem Cells
- Florida Stem Cells
- Georgia Stem Cells
- Hawaii Stem Cells
- Idaho Stem Cells
- Illinois Stem Cells
- Indiana Stem Cells
- Iowa Stem Cells
- Kansas Stem Cells
- Kentucky Stem Cells
- Louisiana Stem Cells
- Maine Stem Cells
- Maryland Stem Cells
- Massachusetts Stem Cells
- Michigan Stem Cells
- Minnesota Stem Cells
- Mississippi Stem Cells
- Missouri Stem Cells
- Montana Stem Cells
- Nebraska Stem Cells
- New Hampshire Stem Cells
- New Jersey Stem Cells
- New Mexico Stem Cells
- New York Stem Cells
- Nevada Stem Cells
- North Carolina Stem Cells
- North Dakota Stem Cells
- Oklahoma Stem Cells
- Ohio Stem Cells
- Oregon Stem Cells
- Pennsylvania Stem Cells
- Rhode Island Stem Cells
- South Carolina Stem Cells
- South Dakota Stem Cells
- Tennessee Stem Cells
- Texas Stem Cells
- Utah Stem Cells
- Vermont Stem Cells
- Virginia Stem Cells
- Washington Stem Cells
- West Virginia Stem Cells
- Wisconsin Stem Cells
- Wyoming Stem Cells
- Biotechnology
- Cell Medicine
- Cell Therapy
- Diabetes
- Epigenetics
- Gene therapy
- Genetics
- Genetic Engineering
- Genetic medicine
- HCG Diet
- Hormone Replacement Therapy
- Human Genetics
- Integrative Medicine
- Molecular Genetics
- Molecular Medicine
- Nano medicine
- Preventative Medicine
- Regenerative Medicine
- Stem Cells
- Stell Cell Genetics
- Stem Cell Research
- Stem Cell Treatments
- Stem Cell Therapy
- Stem Cell Videos
- Testosterone Replacement Therapy
- Testosterone Shots
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
Archives
Recommended Sites
Category Archives: Diabetes
Fewer exams and better eye health? Aye-aye, finds type 1 diabetes study – National Institutes of Health (press release)
Posted: April 19, 2017 at 6:40 pm
National Institutes of Health (press release) | Fewer exams and better eye health? Aye-aye, finds type 1 diabetes study National Institutes of Health (press release) Adjusting the frequency of eye screenings for people with type 1 diabetes based on their risk of severe eye problems would result in fewer eye exams at lower cost and quicker diagnosis and treatment of advanced retinopathy, which can otherwise lead to ... Targeted Retinopathy Screening Proposed in Type 1 Diabetes Is Annual Eye Exam a Must for People With Type 1 Diabetes? |
Read the rest here:
Fewer exams and better eye health? Aye-aye, finds type 1 diabetes study - National Institutes of Health (press release)
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on Fewer exams and better eye health? Aye-aye, finds type 1 diabetes study – National Institutes of Health (press release)
Plant protein may protect against type 2 diabetes, meat eaters at greater risk – Science Daily
Posted: April 19, 2017 at 6:40 pm
Express.co.uk | Plant protein may protect against type 2 diabetes, meat eaters at greater risk Science Daily A new study from the University of Eastern Finland adds to the growing body of evidence indicating that the source of dietary protein may play a role in the risk of developing type 2 diabetes. The researchers found that plant protein was associated ... Warning to Meat Eaters: Plant Protein May Protect Against Type 2 Diabetes Want to Reduce the Risk of Developing Type 2 Diabetes? Try Plant-Based Protein |
Read more:
Plant protein may protect against type 2 diabetes, meat eaters at greater risk - Science Daily
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on Plant protein may protect against type 2 diabetes, meat eaters at greater risk – Science Daily
Diet can protect against type 1 diabetes – Nature.com
Posted: April 19, 2017 at 6:40 pm
Diet can protect against type 1 diabetes Nature.com Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease with a strong genetic basis, but a progressive rise in its incidence indicates that environmental factors also contribute to the disease. Now, Mario et al. report that mice fed diets that release high ... |
Visit link:
Diet can protect against type 1 diabetes - Nature.com
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on Diet can protect against type 1 diabetes – Nature.com
WNY insurer launches new interactive app for those with diabetes – Buffalo News
Posted: April 19, 2017 at 6:40 pm
Those with Type 2 diabetes may soon want to add a new name to their list of iPhone helpers.
Move over Alexa. Zip it, Siri.
Hello Brook.
Independent Health is involved in a pilot program designed to help the makers of the Brook Inc. app bring it to a broader audience in the coming months.
"This is the beginning of a significant transformation, said Dr. Michael Cropp, president and CEO of the Western New York health insurer. While we're starting with diabetes, this can one day be helpful for other diseases, as well."
The free app allows those who use it to tell Brook about their daily blood sugar levels, meals, medication use and exercise. They also can connect Brook technology to fitness trackers and other devices so the app can provide insight into which behaviors are working to keep glucose levels in line, or what needs to be tweaked.
App users also can talk directly or through a chat forum to other users to gain insight into how to better manage their diabetes.
Within the next half a year, they're going to identify a business model around it and determine whether it's something to sell through the app store or whether they should go through health plans and health systems" Dr. Michael Cropp, president and CEO of Independent Health, says about the new Brook app. (Buffalo News file photo)
"So many elements of your life can impact diabetes, Cropp said. If you sleep poorly, if you don't do a regular exercise routine, if you eat the wrong balance of foods.
Cropp said he was attracted to the app because it uses an artificial intelligence engine that collects global information, boasts a rich scientific knowledge about diabetes, and can marry the two to provide keen insight for individual users.
It was designed to interact with you through a conversational user interface, he said. It's very attractive and easy to use. You don't have to go through multi functions, multiple screens. It's right there with you.
"Somebody in the middle of the morning, whose blood sugar has taken a nosedive and feels really awful, can get on Brook and describe what happened. Brook may already know that they slept poorly the night before because the iPhone already told it that. Brook might know that they already did their exercise, then might ask What did you have for breakfast? and be able to come in with some advice at the moment."
Brook CEO Oren Nissim was former chief of Israel-based Telmap, and director and general manager of mobile and location services for Intel Corp. before launching his new company in 2015. The goal: create a wellness platform to help those with chronic diseases better manage them.
The Seattle-based company chose diabetes first and started testing the app with help from several health care systems in the Pacific Northwest. A mutual friend of Cropp and Nissim connected the two by Skype last year and Cropp agreed that Independent Health also would launch the technology.
The app currently is only available on iPhones, though an Android app is in the works, Cropp said.
"We're helping them broaden their base to understand how the app is best used, Cropp said. Within the next half a year, they're going to identify a business model around it and determine whether it's something to sell through the app store or whether they should go through health plans and health systems."
Independent Health has targeted members of its commercial health plans who have Type 2 diabetes and are between the ages 18 and 65. The insurer looks to expand into its Medicare and Medicaid plans as they learn more about Brook. Those interested should call Member Services at 716-631-8701 or 800-501-3439, and ask for an individualized access code to use the app.
Dozens already have signed on. The goal is to get 400 members in the pilot program to capture enough experience.
The early feedback?
"People love it, Cropp said. Having the requisite knowledge at your fingertips, when you want it, when you need it, is unique when you think about how health care has been structured around the provider with schedules and availability. This turns that upside down."
email: refresh@buffnews.com
Twitter: @BNrefresh
See the original post here:
WNY insurer launches new interactive app for those with diabetes - Buffalo News
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on WNY insurer launches new interactive app for those with diabetes – Buffalo News
Diabetes in the Valley: Area families hit hard by condition – Sunbury Daily Item
Posted: April 18, 2017 at 6:40 pm
LEWISBURG Pamela Dixon of Shamokin Dam recently celebrated her 39th birthday. Christy Kerstetter of McAlisterville will turn 39 years old this July.
Both women are married and are raising boys.
Both women are also diabetic. Dixon is a Type 1, and Kerstetter is a Type 2.
So whats the difference and how does it impact each womans life?
Karen Dohl, PA-C, Diabetes Center of Evangelical, West Branch Medical Center explained the difference.
A Type 1 scenario is an autoimmune disease or a situation where the body is attacking itself.
They develop antibodies that kill off an area of the pancreas and the patient needs insulin to sustain life, Dohl said, adding that it is not curable.
A Type 2 diabetic has a high blood sugar level because the pancreas can not keep up with the body. This can be due to being overweight or other health issues and is often genetic.
Some patients no longer produce insulin on their own, Dohl said. When that happens, the Type 2 patient becomes what is known as Type 2 insulin dependent.
Dohl said sometimes patients get confused and think that if they need insulin they must be a Type 1.
All Type 1 diabetics need insulin on a regular basis to survive, but only some Type 2 patients reach this point.
Many Type 1 patients are diagnosed around the age of puberty.
Dr. John Kennedy specializes in Diabetes and Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism and is employed within the Geisinger Health System in Danville.
He explained that at puberty a relative lack of insulin becomes absolute in these patients. He said that Type 1 can be diagnosed at any age, as early as toddlerhood; though this age group makes up one percent of Type 1 diagnosis. This is the subject of a study currently taking place at Geisinger that involves board certified pediatric endocrinologists.
Dixon was 11 years old when she pre-diagnosed herself while reading The Babysitters Club series. It was a book about the character Stacey and her diagnosis of diabetes that made Dixon think her own situation was similar.
Dixon had the same symptoms as the character in the book: excessive thirst and urination and constant fatigue.
A trip to the hospital with her mother revealed her suspicions were true.
Renee Hughes, RN, BSN, CDE, Diabetes Educator, Diabetes Center of Evangelical, West Branch Medical Center revealed the Four Cardinal Symptoms of a diabetic, includimg the frequent urination, excessive thirst fatigue and also blurred vision.
A blood test confirms the diagnosis. A blood sugar level of 126 or higher is considered diabetic. An A1C test tells the patient the average level of blood sugar over three months. Diabetic, Hughes said, is an A1C of 6.5 or higher.
Kerstetter was diagnosed in 2008 with Type 2 diabetes. The 30-year-olds main complaint at the time was intense fatigue. Upon visiting her family doctor, a blood test was taken and revealed she was Type 2 diabetic, a condition that has occurred in her fathers side of the family.
She was given pills to take not insulin and continued on that pattern for six years.
Hughes said pills that help reduce blood sugar levels are the typical first step for new Type 2 diagnosis. If the pills do not seem to help over time, injections may be prescribed. A type 2 diabetic taking injections is not necessarily taking insulin. Some injections aid in controlling the blood sugar by helping your pancreas produce the insulin naturally.
Kerstetter said this is the medication route she is currently subscribed to. In 2014 after a hospital stay for some complications with her kidneys, her new family doctor began an active look at her numbers on a regular basis to find the medication that worked best for her.
Kerstetter still takes two pills at higher doses than when she was diagnosed as well as the once-per-week injection of Tanzeum after unsuccessful results with other injections.
Dixon, meanwhile, has learned her lesson on how important it is to take her insulin regularly.
As a teenager, she said, she was not overly thrilled to be seen carrying a syringe and vile.
She said by her early 20s, after she got married, she was more compliant to take her medication because the pen form of insulin was available.
Very rarely do we have patients choose to use insulin shots, Kennedy said, It now all about the insulin pens.
Another option is an insulin pump, which Dixon said she has not used.
A catheter is placed under the skin and the pump, a small device, can be carried under a waistband and is programmed to give the correct amount of insulin required. The insulin can be adjusted as needed by pressing buttons.
However, it was the implementation of the Dexcom, Dixon said, that has changed her life. The Dexcom CGM or Continuous Glucose Monitor includes a sensor that is attached discretely to the body and then displays the glucose levels to a monitor that can be checked over 200 times a day. It can also be used in collaboration with the pump.
There is also a share option for patients to have their levels displayed on a spouses cell phone or for parents of children who need insulin.
Since Type 2 is the only preventable form of diabetes, Dohl said the key is to keep your weight under control and think about your lifestyle. She also said most patients do not consider diabetes. They often visit the doctor because they may have fainted or have blurred vision and go home with a diabetic diagnosis.
As many as 8.1 million Americans have diabetes and dont know it, Hughes said.
When symptoms arise, see your doctor and get bloodwork, they said.
See the original post here:
Diabetes in the Valley: Area families hit hard by condition - Sunbury Daily Item
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on Diabetes in the Valley: Area families hit hard by condition – Sunbury Daily Item
19-year old Georgia college student dies of diabetes complication – FOX 5 Atlanta
Posted: April 18, 2017 at 6:40 pm
COLUMBUS, Ga. - Looking around Marquis House's bedroom in his family's Columbus, Georgia, home, it almost feels like he's still here, like he's going to walk in the door any second.
"This is all his dirty laundry; I haven't had the heart to wash it," Chereia House, his mother, says. "This is his (insulin) pen right here. His glasses he wore to school."
House spends a lot of time in here, remembering Marquis.
"I think about him," she says. "I think about his personality."
Marquis was 19, a diehard New England Patriots' fan in Falcons' country.
He was a University of West Georgia sophomore, and a video-gamer, who still got a kick out of dressing up for the family's pajama costume Christmas photo.
Marquis was also a type 1 diabetic, drilled in staying on top of his blood sugar.
"He was diagnosed when he was 4 years old," his mother remembers. "He was doing his own injections at 4, he was counting his carbs at 5."
So, losing Marquis to a complication of diabetes?
It just doesn't seem possible.
"Because he was so on top of it," Chereia House says. "He knew what to do, he always knew what to do."
And Type 1 diabetes requires a constant balancing act, says Children's Healthcare of Atlanta endocrinologist Dr. Jessica Hutchins.
"Most kids with Type 1 diabetes are taking 4 to 6 injections of insulin a day, depending on how often they're eating and how well their blood sugars are doing," Dr. Hutchins explains.
On February 11, 2017, a Saturday night, Marquis House, alone in his dorm room, called his mom.
"And he said, 'Oh, I've been throwing up.' And I said, 'What is your blood sugar?'"
Chereia House says Marquis reassured her he'd checked his blood sugar and it was within the normal range.
But he was sick to his stomach, so his mother wondered if he should go to the ER.
"He was, like, 'No, mom, I'm fine. It's just a little bug, if I'm still throwing up in the morning, I will go to the hospital,'" House says.
Marquis didn't know it, but he'd developed a serious complication, known as diabetic ketoacidosis, or DKA, often triggered by an infection or missed insulin treatments.
His insulin insulin levels had dropped dangerously low.
His body, searching for fuel for energy, had begun breaking down fat, releasing acids known as ketones into his blood, which were spilling over into his urine.
In the early stages, Dr. Hutchins says, symptoms of DKA include weight loss, an increase in thirst, and frequent urination.
Kids may feel very tired and fatigued.
But as the condition worsens, she says, patients in DKA often experience vomiting, dehydration and mental confusion.
That may explain why Marquis House simply thought he just had a stomach bug.
"Usually the symptoms have been going on for weeks, very subtly and nobody has really noticed," Dr. Hutchins says. "But as far as the actual DKA, that can, within 24 hours can go from vomiting a little bit into a severe life-threatening condition."
When she hung up with Marquis, his mother asked him to call her in the morning.
"That Sunday morning, I got up and I was, like, 'Oh, he didn't call me,' says Chereia House. "So I texted him."
Marquis never responded.
Hours later, he was dead in his dorm room.
Only now, two months after his death, is his family putting together what happened in Marquis' final hours.
"He got up at some point, and was getting ready to administer his insulin," says Chereia Houe. "Or (he was trying to) check his blood. He had everything out. And then passed out."
Today, Chereia House says, it's still hard to believe the heart of their family is gone.
"But when I miss him, I come in and I just lay across his bed," his mother says. "To kind of like get his, to get his scent."
Chereia House, still consumed by questions, says she's telling their story because she wants other parents to know about DKA and other complications of diabetes.
Follow your gut, if you feel something is wrong, she says.
She wishes more than anything she's followed hers with Marquis that February night.
"I feel if I would have pushed him, and made him go to the hospital," Chereia says. "Maybe we would not be here doing this story. Every day I live with that regret, for not pushing it.`"
NEXT ARTICLE:Brain scans may help depression patients find the right treatment
View original post here:
19-year old Georgia college student dies of diabetes complication - FOX 5 Atlanta
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on 19-year old Georgia college student dies of diabetes complication – FOX 5 Atlanta
How diabetes is linked to gut bacteria – ModernMedicine
Posted: April 18, 2017 at 6:40 pm
The majority of cells within our bodies are not humannor is the majority of our DNA. We are hosts to 1014 bacterial cells (50 percent to 90 percent of all cells) that make up as much as 95 percent of our total DNA.1 Most of these organisms live within the gastrointestinal (GI) tract but also within the genitourinary tract, on our skin, and on the ocular surfaceforming what is collectively known as the microbiome.
Given this abundance of nonhuman species living on and within our bodies, it is not surprising that there is a link between specific bacteria to systemic and ocular diseaseincluding diabetes and diabetes-related eye disease.
What studies tell us
A reduction in gut bacterial diversity precedes the onset of clinical diabetes.2 Reduction of intestinal species that produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), especially butyrate but also propionate and acetate, appears to be particularly important. These SCFAs improve insulin sensitivity by stimulating peroxisome-proliferator agonist gamma receptors3 (PPARG), analogous to the PPARG diabetes medication, pioglitazone (Actos, Takeda).
Butyrate enhances production of the intestinal hormone, glucagon-like peptide-14 (GLP-1), which increases insulin production, decreases glucagon secretion, and inhibits appetite. It is analogous to GLP-1 analog drugs like exenatide (Byetta, Amylin) and liraglutide (Victoza, Novo Nordisk).
Butyrate also enhances intestinal barrier function, preventing translocation of bacteria and lipopolysaccharides derived from the cell walls of Gram-negative organisms (endotoxemia) that leads to so-called leaky gut syndrome. Leaky gut syndrome has been linked to autoimmunity in type 1 diabetes and inflammatory cytokine production in type 2 diabetes (T2DM).5,6
Introduction of butyrate-producing bacteria via probiotic supplementation has been shown to improve insulin sensitivity and reduce inflammation in humans with type 2 diabetes.7
Perhaps more convincingly, transplanting fecal material from healthy adults with markedly higher numbers of butyrate-producing bacteria to obese patients with T2DM and lower numbers of such bacteria resulted in nearly 80 percent better insulin sensitivity in one small study.8
Recent meta-analysis of 11 studies with more than 600 subjects shows that multi-species probiotic supplementation modestly but significantly improves insulin resistance, excess insulin production, fasting blood sugars, and mean blood glucose (HbA1c) in humans with T2DM.9
See the original post:
How diabetes is linked to gut bacteria - ModernMedicine
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on How diabetes is linked to gut bacteria – ModernMedicine
Program identifies risky diabetic drivers and helps them improve – KFGO
Posted: April 18, 2017 at 6:40 pm
Tuesday, April 18, 2017 3:43 p.m. CDT
By Will Boggs MD
(Reuters Health) - A short questionnaire can identify drivers with type 1 diabetes who are at high risk of future driving mishaps, and an online intervention can help them avoid these mishaps, according to a U.S. study.
Like pilots who have to go through a pre-flight checklist to ensure all systems are a go, drivers with diabetes should go through a check list, asking themselves whether they have had more physical activity, taken more insulin, eaten fewer carbohydrates than usual, feel any unusual symptoms and judge whether they are low or likely to go low during the drive, said lead author Dr. Daniel Cox from the University of Virginia Health System and Virginia Driving Safety Laboratory in Charlottesville.
If the answer is yes, then they should take appropriate steps to avoid hypoglycemia while driving, Cox said by email.
Drivers with type 1 diabetes have a greater risk of collisions than their spouses without diabetes, and those mishaps correspond to the use of insulin pumps, a history of collisions, severe low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) and previous hypoglycemia-related driving mishaps, the study team writes in Diabetes Care.
The researchers developed an 11-item questionnaire to screen drivers with type 1 diabetes for a high risk of driving mishaps and developed an online intervention intended to help high-risk individuals avoid future mishaps.
Their Risk Assessment of Diabetic Drivers (RADD) scale included questions about past experiences while driving, like have you had an automobile accident or received a moving vehicle violation in the last 2 years? and diabetes-specific questions like, have you had low blood glucose in the past 6 months? and was it a hassle trying to hide dizziness or other symptoms of low blood glucose?
Based on answers to 11 questions, around 35 percent of individuals with type 1 diabetes could be classified as high-risk drivers whose mishap rate was nearly three times higher than that of people in the low-risk group.
High-risk drivers who went on to participate in the online intervention at DiabetesDriving.com had a driving mishap rate of about 2.5 per year in the following 12 months, compared with about 4.25 mishaps per year among high-risk drivers who did not participate in the intervention. Still, the mishap rate of high-risk drivers who did the intervention remained higher than that of low-risk drivers.
Driving is a privilege, not a right, Cox said. Whether we have type 1 diabetes, sleep apnea, narcolepsy, slowed reaction times due to aging, or some other chronic or acute condition (e.g., excessive sleepiness or intoxication), we all have a responsibility to ourselves, our families, and others on the road to ensure we are a safe driver.
People with diabetes should realize they should never drive when their blood glucose is below 70, because it is too easy to slip from mild hypoglycemia to moderate hypoglycemia that impairs judgment, information processing speed, and general reaction time, Cox added. As soon as hypoglycemia is detected or suspected, the driver should immediately safely pull off the road, treat it, and not resume driving until the hypoglycemia resolves.
Diabetic patients have a tendency not to disclose their driving mishaps or near miss events due to fear of losing their driving licenses," said Dr. Thinzar Min from Swansea University in the UK, who was not involved in the study.
In the UK, drivers are allowed only one severe hypoglycemic episode in 12 months to retain Group 1 license (cars and motorcycles) and no severe hypoglycemic episodes for Group 2 licenses (trucks and busses), Min noted.
I think the RADD scale would be more accurate if the patients can use it to assess themselves if they are high-risk or not, she said. Online interventions should be aimed at all diabetic patients who are taking insulin.
Dr. Eitaro Nakashima from Chubu Rosai Hospitalin Nagoya, Japan, wrote recently about the pitfalls of tightening driving regulations for diabetic patients in Japan and Europe. "In my opinion, each patient should understand the degree of risk of driving mishaps and prepare sugar in their car. For general public, education and individual customized treatment are important for good outcome instead of tightening of driving regulations, he told Reuters Health by email.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2oJgxvQ Diabetes Care, online April 12, 2017.
Read the original post:
Program identifies risky diabetic drivers and helps them improve - KFGO
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on Program identifies risky diabetic drivers and helps them improve – KFGO
The 51 countries with the highest diabetes rates – Quad City Times
Posted: April 18, 2017 at 6:40 pm
Diabetes is one of the largest health issues of the 21st century. According to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, roughly 29 million people have diabetes in the U.S. -- 9.3 percent of the population. Equally concerning is that nearly 30 percent of those cases are undiagnosed.
How does the U.S. compare to other nations when it comes to levels of diabetes? HealthGrove, a health data site by Graphiq, used data from the International Diabetes Federation to find the countries and territories with the highest rates of diabetes in 2015 (the most recent year available). The report from the IDF includes levels of diabetes prevalence for people aged 20 to 79, as well as the number of diabetes-related fatalities and total number of diabetes cases. The IDF prevalence figures are age-adjusted to account for different age structures in various countries.
For context, HealthGrove also included the average amount spent per person with diabetes for each country, as reported by the IDF. These amounts are measured in international dollars, a hypothetical currency with the same purchasing power parity of U.S. dollars in the U.S. at a given point in time.
The data from the IDF includes the prevalence of both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes (either diagnosed or undiagnosed). Type 1 occurs when the pancreas makes insufficient insulin; Type 2, the more common variety, occurs when the body has difficulty producing and using insulin.
The ranking is dominated by small island nations, particularly in the Pacific Islands. Many countries in this region have dealt with malnutrition and inadequate food labeling, especially as they import more processed food. Countries in the Middle East also showed reported elevated levels of diabetes. Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Qatar all made the top 10.
Note: Ties are broken by the number of diabetes-related deaths. There are countries where certain variables are not monitored and could not be extrapolated accurately by the IDF; these were therefore left blank.
Read the original post:
The 51 countries with the highest diabetes rates - Quad City Times
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on The 51 countries with the highest diabetes rates – Quad City Times
Ten-year-old, family, explain life with Type 1 Diabetes – WAAY
Posted: April 17, 2017 at 6:43 am
It was Leland Jeffrey's fourth birthday, but instead of a day filled with cake and ice cream, Leland was in Huntsville Hospital with a blood sugar level ten times higher than what it should be. Doctors told Leland's parents, Beverly and David, it was astonishing their son was still conscious.
At the time, the Jeffreys couldn't have anticipated the news they'd receive from their doctor. Leland, a perfectly happy and healthy child, was a Type 1 diabetic.
Commonly referred to as Juvenile Diabetes, we now know the condition can affect people of all ages. Actress Mary Tyler Moore was diagnoses when she was in her 20s, and battled the disease until she passed away this year.
As for Leland, his mom said there were signs in recent weeks that suddenly made sense post-diagnosis. Her typically sweet little boy would anger easily, was consuming a tremendous amount of liquid, and had dropped a good ten pounds.
It was in his son's hospital room that David described the "rapid fire" of questions and information being hurled toward him and his wife. Gradually Leland's condition improved. His blood sugar stabilized, and after a hospital stay that included terrifying words like "brain swelling," he was allowed to go home.
For the Jeffreys it was the start of a new way of life.
Six years removed from that day, Beverly said the routine of daily blood testings - approximately six between home and school - have now become commonplace.
Diets were altered and her little boy was given some very grown up instructions regarding his health. He learned to check his own sugars, and to recognize the signs his sugars were crashing.
Leland is able to run and play like any active 10-year-old. He told WAAY-31 he just needs to be aware if his body starts tingling. That is when he knows to go inside his house, have some juice, then rest for a bit before going outside.
It is those kinds of signs that Pam Glover hopes to educate diabetics and their families about through her work as program manager of the diabetes management program at Huntsville Hospital.
Her first order of business is to make people understand the difference between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.
Type 1 is the result of a virus which attacks the pancreas. Some people have a predisposition, but it is something totally beyond their control. Children, such as Leland, who are diagnosed at a young age must spend their entire life looking for warning signs of an impending crash. Glover said it can quite literally mean the different between life and death.
Type 2 diabetes is usually the result of lifestyle, things like diet or lack of exercise. However, she said that isn't an across the board cause for all Type 2 cases, and that each can vary depending on things like smoking or even family history.
Regardless, Glover said it is crucial for those with both types to be aware of the seriousness of their respective disease and to manage it effectively and carefully.
As for Leland, this little boy learned how to do it. While at first he said he "hated having diabetes," and "wanted to go back to life before," he's learned to manage it and realizes it will be part of his daily routine if he wants to live a happy life.
The Jeffreys have been very active in the Huntsville chapter of the JDRF. Beverly said it was the support system provided by JDRF that helped her and David to cope with the initial diagnosis. They've remained active participants in the annual One Walk, which takes place each spring to raise money to fight - and hopefully one day cure - diabetes.
This year's race is happening on Saturday, April 22, at the Jackson Center in Cummins Research Park. You can register by clicking right here.
See the article here:
Ten-year-old, family, explain life with Type 1 Diabetes - WAAY
Posted in Diabetes
Comments Off on Ten-year-old, family, explain life with Type 1 Diabetes – WAAY