What Are The Causes of Diabetes?
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What Are the Causes of Diabetes?
Diabetes encompasses a number of different diseases which involve problems associated with hormone insulin production within the human body. While not all people who suffer from this disease are overweight, obesity and the lack of proper exercise are considered to be the primary causes of diabetes. In fact being overweight is considered a contributing factor in nearly 95 percent of all the causes of diabetes diagnosed in America.
We hope this article will help diabetes patients understand what happens inside their body once they have encountered this disease as well as the particular health concerns that increase the risks of developing diabetes.
Diabetes is considered a serious disease and generally produces considerable nerve pain for the patient involved. The pancreas is an organ that is located directly behind the stomach. Its purpose is to release insulin within the body to help the body store and use its supply of sugar that it gets from its digested foods. So what are the causes of diabetes? Diabetes occurs when one of the following conditions happen:
• In the event that the pancreas fails to produce insulin.
• If the pancreas produces insufficient supplies of insulin.
• If the body fails to respond to its produced insulin
Some forms of diabetes do in fact produce insulin. Unfortunately the body simply does not produce an adequate amount. This is the major difference between a type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Type 1 diabetes does not produce insulin and thus must have daily injections to survive whereas the type 2 may produce some insulin but not nearly enough.
When a condition like the one described above occurs the glucose can not get into the body properly. If the glucose tends to build up in the patients blood instead of getting to the body’s cells then these cells are unable to properly function. This is one of the primary causes of diabetes.
Insulin in these cases is very important since the human body is made up of millions of cells all which feed off of sugar in order to make energy. Whenever you eat a meal your food is broken down into glucose or sugar. This glucose is then transported through the body’s bloodstream and to the cells where it is used to provide the needed energy for your body’s daily activities.
This glucose found in the bloodstream is regulated by the body’s insulin. Under normal conditions the insulin is continually being released in very small amounts by the body’s pancreas. As the amount of glucose increases in the blood it causes the pancreas to release additional amounts of insulin. This in turn pushes the glucose into the cells for absorption. As a result the glucose levels within the blood drops.
Our body works tirelessly through out the day. In order to maintain the proper glucose levels from dropping too low a signal is received which indicates that it is time to eat in order to release some of the stored up glucose from the liver.
For more information about the Causes of Diabetes visit our previous post.
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July 2nd, 2009 at 1:00 pm
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