Look For These Signs and Symptoms of Diabetes:
Many of the signs of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes are similar. In both, there is too much glucose in the blood and not enough in the cells of your body. High glucose levels in Type I are due to a lack of insulin because the insulin
producing cells have been destroyed. Type 2 diabetes occurs when the
body's cells become resistant to insulin that is being produced. Either
way, your cells aren't getting the glucose that they need, and your body
lets you know by giving you these signs and symptoms.
Frequent trips to the bathroom:
Are
you visiting the bathroom much more lately? Does it seem like you
urinate all day long? Urination becomes more frequent when there is too
much glucose in the blood. If insulin is nonexistent or ineffective, the
kidneys can't filter glucose back to the blood. They become overwhelmed
and try to draw extra water out of the blood to dilute the glucose.
This keeps your bladder full and it keeps you running to the bathroom.
Unquenchable Thirst:
If
it feels like you can't get enough water and you're drinking much more
than usual, it could be a sign of diabetes, especially if it seems to go
hand in hand with frequent urination. If your body is pulling extra
water out of your blood and you're running to the bathroom more, you
will become dehydrated and feel the need to drink more to replace the
water that you are losing.
Losing Weight Without Trying:
This
symptom is more noticeable with Type 1 diabetes. In Type 1, the
pancreas stops making insulin, possibly due to a viral attack on
pancreas cells or because an autoimmune response makes the body attack
the insulin producing cells. The body desperately looks for an energy
source because the cells aren't getting glucose. It starts to break down
muscle tissue and fat for energy. Type 2 happens gradually with
increasing insulin resistance so weight loss is not as noticeable.
Weakness and Fatigue:
It's
that bad boy glucose again. Glucose from the food we eat travels into
the bloodstream where insulin is supposed to help it transition into the
cells of our body. The cells use it to produce the energy we need to
live. When the insulin isn't there or if the cells don't react to it
anymore, then the glucose stays outside the cells in the bloodstream.
The cells become energy starved and you feel tired and run down.
Tingling or Numbness in Your Hands, Legs or Feet:
This
symptom is called neuropathy. It occurs gradually over time as
consistently high glucose in the blood damages the nervous system,
particularly in the extremities. Type 2 diabetes is a gradual onset, and
people are often not aware that they have it. Therefore, blood sugar
might have been high for more than a few years before a diagnosis is
made. Nerve damage can creep up without our knowledge. Neuropathy can very often improve when tighter blood glucose control is achieved.
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