What You Have to Know About Juvenile Diabetes
December 23, 2009 by TreadmillsCenter
Juvenile diabetes is also known as Type 1 diabetes. Juvenile diabetes is the more traditional terminology since in the past it most often showed up in childhood or adolescence. Because many adults are now being diagnosed with this condition, it’s more suitable to call it Type 1 diabetes, as opposed to juvenile diabetes.
Diabetes is a disease wherein the body can’t transform sugar that’s in your bloodstream. This is because] the pancreas has stopped producing insulin. This means there are excessive amounts of glucose that accumulate in the blood, which can lead to severe health concerns. It is a medical condition that’s developing in more and more people each day. As many as 30,000 people are diagnosed with this disease every year in the United States. Worldwide, that number is over one hundred and twenty million people who are experiencing diabetes.
Juvenile diabetes is considered to be a chronic problem. It results from the body not dealing with sugars in the blood correctly. Blood sugar levels that are not adequately kept under control might lead to problems as your body tries to cope with converting the sugar. This means that your body becomes unable to take in the glucose, and it remains in the blood stream. In most instances, those who suffer from juvenile diabetes will require a lifetime of insulin injections in order to break down the blood sugar.
Classified as an autoimmune disease, juvenile diabetes causes the body’s immune system to damage itself. The immune system starts to attack its own support systems, for reasons we haven’t discovered. In the case of diabetes, this is the cells that produce insulin in the pancreas.
It’s important that you learn what the symptoms of juvenile diabetes are so you can be tested immediately. If left untreated, this disease is very harmful; immediately diagnosis and treatment is crucial. Typical symptoms are habitual urination and always being thirsty. You’ll find these symptoms for not just juvenile diabetes but Type 2 (adult onset) diabetes too.
To help with juvenile diabetes you should cut out all sugar. Furthermore, treating diabetes requires that you change your diet in addition to your general lifestyle.
It is a continuous process to find a cure for juvenile diabetes. The leader in this effort is the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF). It also has a global mandate to assist diabetic persons in learning to manage their disease. Also, JDRF ensures that research continues by raising money.



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