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Ebook Table Of Contents
1. Overview of Diabetes and Diabetic Amyotrophy ………………………………………………………….2
2. What is Type 1 Diabetes? …………………………………………………………………………………………3
3. Causes and Consequences Type 2 Diabetes …………………………………………………………………5
4. Gestational Diabetes ……………………………………………………………………………………………….6
5. Can Diabetes be Cured? ……………………………………………………………………………………………8
6. The Main Diabetes Symptoms …………………………………………………………………………………..9
7. Mild Diabetes Treatment ………………………………………………………………………………………..11
8. Why Only some Diabetics Need Insulin Injections ……………………………………………………….13
10. Managing Diabetes ………………………………………………………………………………………………..14
11. Can Diabetes be Controlled by Diet? ………………………………………………………………………..16
12.Red Flags for Diabetics ……………………………………………………………………………………………17
13. I’m a Diabetic –Can I Play Sport? ……………………………………………………………………………..19
14. How to Live with a Diabetic – and Stay Sane ………………………………………………………………20
15. How to Prevent Diabetes ………………………………………………………………………………………..22
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1. Overview of Diabetes and Diabetic Amyotrophy
Diabetes is a condition where the sufferer’s pancreas cannot make the insulin that is necessary to take glucose from the blood and use it to nourish the cells of the body and give them energy. We hear lots about diabetes and most people know there is type 1 and Type 1 diabetes and all the various complications that can arise with them, but the complication of diabetic amyotrophy is less commonly mentioned.
In some cases, it is referred to as proximal neuropathy as well. The most typical diabetic neuropathies start in the limbs. That explains the birth of the term – proximal neuropathy. The most typical symptoms comprise unexpected slashing pain in the buttocks and other tight areas of the body.
Many patients experience difficulty when trying to make movements which involve these areas. Other symptoms can include stomach bloating and sudden weight loss. As time passes, the symptoms may improve. The condition generally lasts for some months prior to its subsiding. The pain can run to the edges of your limbs and you can develop extremely weak and atrophied muscles. Apart from having other medical names, this disorder is most often called the Bruns-Garland Syndrome. However, the medical professionals have more than a few other names which refer to this disease. This disorder is unswervingly credited to Type 2 diabetes.
Some people wonder what diabetes is and what the big deal is about Type 2 diabetes. It is a kind of metabolic disorder which originates from failure of the body to produce and supply enough insulin required for absorbing the glucose or sugar which gets into the body from the food which you eat. There are two key categories of diabetes, namely – type 1 and type 2. The first kind is characterized by the failure of the body to produce the insulin required. And this generally occurs amongst children. The other kind is the disturbance of the insulin production process in the body or the failure of insulin to function. These problems may occur due to any other disorder or due to any kind of unhealthy lifestyle habits. And the type 2 category of diabetes generally affects obese adults.
Type 1 diabetes is oftentimes hereditary and is triggered by certain kinds of infections or by some sort of genetic disorder, so people do not always have much control over the development of these diseases. That is just the opposite to the Type 2 diabetes which causes diabetic amyotrophy. Actually, diabetes type 2 may occur as the outcome of the habit of unhealthy food consumption, and vices like smoking and drinking. It usually strikes obese people, particularly those who are into smoking. People suffer from this kind of problem due to the intake of prohibited drugs or due to the consumption of alcohol. These harmful habits disturb the natural works of the body – which include the production of insulin and its performance.
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