My cousin is an insulin dependent diabetic & she had a very rough pregnany & the baby was premature. He had to have a few surgeries after birth also. But now he is a healthy 16 month old baby. She on the other hand now has liver & stomach cancer. Any prayers is much needed. They only gave her 6 months.
IDDM: Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus.
It is possible for a non-insulin-dependent diabetic type 2 to be healthy if the effort is made. Moreover, there is growing evidence that some non-insulin-dependent diabetic type twos can (through sustained effort) "reverse" their diabetic diagnoses via diet and exercise.
120-130
Insulin Dependent Diabetic Mellitus
Insulin Dependent Diabetic Mellitus, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Multiple Sclerosis
Type 2 diabetes is a type of diabetes where the individual is not fully dependent on insulin. A type 1 diabetic requires insulin.
Insulin dependent gestational diabetes is diabetes in pregnancy that must be treated with insulin. Some women may have milder cases and can lower their blood sugar through diet and exercise. Others need extra insulin to combat high blood sugar levels in pregnancy.
Type-1 diabetics are generally insulin-dependent, but not all insulin-dependent diabetics are type-1. Type-1 refers to how the patient contracted diabetes -- by having their pancreatic beta cells stop producing insulin, usually due to an autoimmune disorder. Type-2 diabetics became diabetic through a combination of genetic and lifestyle problems that reduced insulin production and/or increased insulin resistance. Type-2 diabetics usually begin treatment with diet changes and oral medications that increase insulin production or reduce resistance, rather than taking injections of actual insulin. But a Type-2 diabetic may become insulin-dependent over time, if treatment isn't effective. The high blood sugar can attack the pancreas (through oxidative stress and amyloidosis), reducing insulin production until even oral medications are no longer adequate.
Jean-Pierre Felber has written: 'From obesity to diabetes' -- subject(s): Complications, Diabetes Mellitus, Non-Insulin Dependent, Etiology, Glucose, Insulin, Metabolism, Non-insulin-dependent diabetes, Obesity, Physiopathology, Risk factors
At least 4 times, especially before/after meals.
Yes. The incidence of diabetes among dogs is on the rise. There is a growing epidemic of canine obesity. Some dogs are insulin dependent diabetics.
Insulin