Diabetes
Diabetes is a disease affecting the manner in which the body
handles digested carbohydrates. If neglected, diabetes can cause
extremely severe health complications, ranging from blindness to
kidney failure.
Around eight percent of the population in the United States has
diabetes. This means that around sixteen million people have
been diagnosed with the disease, based only on national
statistics. The American Diabetes Association estimates that
diabetes accounts for 178,000 deaths, as well as 54,000
amputees, and 12,000-24,000 cases of blindness annually.
Blindness is twenty-five times even more common among diabetic
patients in comparison with nondiabetics. If current trends
continue, by the year 2010 complications of diabetes will exceed
both heart disease and cancer as the leading cause of death in
America.
Diabetics have a high level of blood glucose. Blood sugar level
is regulated by insulin, a hormone secreted by the pancreas,
which releases it in response to carbohydrate consumption.
Insulin causes the cells of the body to absorb glucose from the
blood. The glucose then serves as fuel for cellular functions.
Traditional diagnostic standards for diabetes have been fasting
plasma glucose levels greater than 140 mg/dL on 2 occasions and
plasma glucose greater than 200 mg/dL following a 75-gram
glucose load. However, even more recently, the American Diabetes
Association lowered the criteria for a diabetes diagnosis to
fasting plasma glucose levels equal to or higher than 126 mg/dL.
Fasting plasma levels outside the normal limit demand further
testing, usually by repeating the fasting plasma glucose check
and (if indicated) initiating an oral glucose tolerance test.
The many symptoms of diabetes include excessive urination,
excessive thirst and hunger, sudden weight loss, blurred vision,
delay in healing of wounds, dry and itchy skin, repeated
infections, fatigue and headache. While suggestive of diabetes,
these symptoms can also be caused by other factors, and
therefore anyone with symptoms suspicious of the disease should
be tested.
There are 2 different varieties of diabetes. Type I Diabetes
(juvenile diabetes, also known as insulin-dependent diabetes):
The cause of type I diabetes starts with pancreatic inability to
make insulin. This causes 5-10% of cases of diabetes. The
pancreatic Islet of Langerhans cells, which secrete the hormone,
are destroyed by the patient's own immune system, probably
because it mistakes them for a virus. Viral infections are
believed to be the trigger that sets off this auto-immune
disease. Type I diabetes is most prevelant in the caucasian
population and has a hereditary component.
If untreated, Type I or juvenile diabetes can lead to death
within two to three months of the onset, as the cells of the
body starve because they no longer receive the hormonal prompt
to absorb glucose. While a great majority of Type I diabetics
are young (hence the term Juvenile Diabetes), the condition can
develop at any age. Autoimmune diabetes is diagnosed by an
immunological assay which shows the presence of
anti-insulin/anti-islet-cell antibodies.
Type II Diabetes (non insulin dependent diabetes, also known as
adult onset diabetes): This diabetes is a consequence of body
tissues becoming resistant to the effects of insulin. It
accounts for 90-95% of cases. In many cases the pancreas is
producing a plentiful amount of insulin, however the cells of
the body have become unresponsive to its effect due to the
chronically high level of the hormone. Finally the pancreas will
exhaust its over-active secretion of the hormone, and insulin
levels fall to beneath normal.
A tendency towards Type II diabetes is hereditary, although it
is unlikely to develop in normal-weight individuals eating a
low- or even moderate-carbohydrate diet. Obese, sedentary
individuals who eat poor-quality diets built around refined
starch, which constantly activates pancreatic insulin secretion,
are prone to develop insulin resistance. Native peoples like
North American Aboriginals, whose traditional diets never
included refined starch and sugar until these items were
introduced by Europeans, have very high rates of diabetes, five
times the rate of caucasians. Blacks and hispanics are also at
higher risk of the disease. Though Type II diabetes isn't as
immediately disastrous as Type I, it can lead to health
complications after many years and cause serious disability and
shortened lifespan. As with Type I diabetes, the condition
develops primarily in a certain age group, in this case patients
over forty (which is why it's typically termed Adult Onset
Diabetes); however, with the rise in childhood and teenage
obesity, this condition is being seen for the first time in
school children as well.
If treatment is neglected, both Type I and Type II diabetes can
lead to life-threatening complications like kidney damage
(nephropathy), heart disease, nerve damage (neuropathy), retinal
damage and blindness(retinopathy), and hypoglycemia (drastic
reduction in glucose levels). Diabetes damages blood vessels,
especially smaller end-arteries, leading to very severe and
premature atherosclerosis. Diabetics are prone to foot problems
because neuropathy, which afflicts about ten percent of
patients, causes their feet to lose sensation. Foot injuries,
common in day-to-day living, go unnoticed, and these injuries
cannot heal because of atherosclerotic blockage of the
microscopic arteries in the foot. Gangrene and subsequent
amputation of toes, feet or even legs is the result for many
elderly patients with poorly-controlled diabetes. Usually these
sequelae are seen sooner in Type I than Type II diabetes,
because Type II patients have a small amount of their own
insulin production left to buffer changes in blood sugar levels.
Type I diabetes is a severe disease and there is no known
permanent cure for it. Nonetheless, the symptoms can be
controlled by strict dietary monitering and insulin injections.
Implanted pumps which release insulin immediately in response to
changes in blood glucose are in the testing stages.
In theory, since it induced by diet, Type II diabetes should be
preventable and manageable by dietary changes alone. However, as
so often happens, clinical theory is defeated by human nature in
this case, as many diabetics (and many obese people without
diabetes) find it personally impossible to lose weight or even
stick to a diet free of starchy, sugary junk food. So Type II
diabetes is frequently treated with drugs which restore the
body's response to its own insulin, and in a few cases
injections of insulin.
Please note that this article isn't a subsitute for medical
advice. If you suspect you have diabetes or even are in a high
risk demographic group, please see your doctor.