July 22, 2007

A Guide to Diabetes Treatment

Diabetes is a lifelong condition, one which occurs when your body does not produce any or enough insulin. If you have diabetes, then you need to use some form of diabetes treatment in order to supply your body with the proper amount of sugar, as this is necessary for your cells to be able to function properly.

The Different Diabetes Treatment Options

There are actually a few different diabetes treatment options available, although you are generally not allowed to pick and choose, but rather the type of treatment will be decided for you depending on your particular case and situation. When it comes to medical treatment, it is highly individualized, and so the type of treatment you should use will depend on several factors, such as your age and general health.

Your doctor will set goals for you in terms of lifestyle changes that you should make and blood sugar control that you should use, and when you are first diagnosed with the condition your doctor will spend a lot of time working with you and educating you on the ailment, as the only way you are going to be able to properly treat your diabetes is by becoming informed and aware on it.

Type 1 Diabetes

There is type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and with type 1, insulin must be given as an injection, because if it were taken orally here the insulin would wind up being destroyed in the stomach before it even had a chance to get into the blood where it is actually needed. Most people are able to complete this diabetes treatment themselves, however beforehand you can have a trained professional who will show you how to store and inject the insulin.

You will usually have to give yourself two or three injections a day in order to keep your blood sugar level properly regulated and it is very important to make sure that you eat every time you have taken insulin, because if you do not, then you could end up getting hypoglycemia, which is a serious reaction to insulin.

With type 2 diabetes, the diabetes treatment differs, and in this case you will most likely have to change your lifestyle, as depending on how elevated your blood sugar and glycosylated hemoglobin are at the time of your actual diagnosis, you may be given the chance to lower your blood sugar without medication, and this chance will usually span over a few months, at the end of which if there is still no improvement further measures will be taken.

 

 

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Filed under Diabetes by health-guide

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