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Informative Articles

Combination of Thiazide-Type Diuretic and Beta-Blocker may Cause Diabetes
Clinical Question: In patients with hypertension is it safe to combine thiazide-type diuretic and beta-blocker? Bottom Line: Studies suggest that the routine combined use of a thiazide with a beta-blocker should be questioned in the early...

Coping with Diabetes
Every day, in the United States, more than 2000 new cases of diabetes are diagnosed. Type II diabetes, the most prevalent form of diabetes worldwide, often shows few or even no symptoms! After eating, food is broken down into what is known as...

Diabetic Nerve Damage: The Height Connection
If you have diabetes, it may be better to be short than tall. Why? Well, it has to do with those pseky foot and leg ulcers that can cause anthing from minor inconvenience to amputation. When ulcers become series, it's becaue they have become...

Obesity & Diabetes
Health is a big asset which requires proper care and nurturing. A fit and trim body gives inner and outer confidence whereas an obese physique makes you dull and pessimistic. Obesity breeds other diseases and makes our existence uncomfortable and...

Top 7 Ways that Exercise Helps Diabetics
Exercise is an important tool in managing your diabetes in order to live a longer, healthier life. 1. Exercise increase insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism. The key problem of Type 2 diabetics is insulin insensitivity, or insulin...

 
Diabetes Awareness: I'll Wait 'til it Hurts




I'll Wait 'til it Hurts


"If it ain't broke, most people don't fix it."


Do you know if you have diabetes?


Did you know type 2 diabetes symptoms only become "obvious" once the disease has substantially progressed?


By the time many type 2 diabetics (and often their doctors) realize action is necessary, the disease, with its destructive high blood sugars, has been silently damaging their body for years.


Complications to the blood vessels and tissues of your eyes, feet, heart, kidneys, and other organs, are likely well underway.


You visit the doctor because you feel bad, and you wish to feel better. You react to the symptoms of perceived illness. This is understandable, but does not allow much room for prevention or early detection of diabetes.


Of course this idea, "Don't see the doctor 'til it hurts," comes from our "busier-then-ever" lifestyles. But to blame, to point fingers after the damage has started is as pointless as is the leaping bungee-jumper's complaint that his equipment has just failed. It's a little late to talk about why. Some problems are better prevented.


If you have type 2 diabetes, you know most of the time you don't feel very bad. You might think that because you don't feel very bad, it isn't very serious, and you don't have to do anything about it just now. "I'll wait 'til it hurts" ...You couldn't be more wrong.


Diabetes damages your body with high blood sugars. It doesn't care whether your sugars are high from type 2, type 1, or some other cause - if they're up, they're doing damage. Type 2 diabetics who let their sugars run "because they don't feel bad" are doing serious damage to their eyes, kidneys, hearts, and nervous systems.


Suppose you have diabetes, and don't want the complications. Suppose you don't know you have diabetes, but you're from a high-risk group (maybe someone in your family has or had diabetes), and you want to cut the risks. Or, suppose you just want to feel better.


It's all the same - Your early detection, education, and prevention work best.


Don't wait 'til it hurts. Ask your doctor about diabetes and have your blood sugar checked several times a year.


For more information about diabetes, including a Diabetes Quiz and a Free booklet, visit our website at:


http://hope4diabetes.com/info


This 20 page FREE booklet will provide you with in-depth information on comprehensive diabetes care. The 7 principles, or steps, will help you to understand, manage and diagnose your potential diabetes risk.


It could help you live a longer and more active life. The booklet is Yours absolutely FREE - No Risk! Share it NOW with the people you love and want to Keep alive!.








David Anderson is a freelance health writer for Hope4Diabetes.com. Email contact information is available on the website. For telephone contact, call me at: (316) 541-2208




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