Basic Facts About Diabetes
Certain subjects will become very important
to you such as nutrition, weight loss, exercise and lifestyle.
Every newly diagnosed diabetic will need to learn how to make wise
food choices and how to plan meals that will lead to better
diabetic management.
Anyone diagnosed with diabetes or those who live with and love a
diabetic should understand the basics of the disease. There are
important things to know about the disease that may mean life or
death to the individual who has diabetes. It is important to know
about how eating certain foods can have an effect on your diabetes,
and how other factors can affect your blood sugar, how to check
your blood sugar, and who should manage your diabetes, what role
your emotions have on your disease and the connection between your
diabetes and heart disease.
Certain subjects will become very important to you such as
nutrition, weight loss, exercise and lifestyle.
Every newly diagnosed diabetic will need to learn how to make
wise food choices and how to plan meals that will lead to better
diabetic management.
Nutrition:
Individuals diagnosed with diabetes have the same basic
nutritional requirements as everyone else. Nutrition is one factor
that needs to be controlled when you are a diabetic. You can no
longer eat based on desire and in any amount you want. Diabetics to
remain healthy need to follow a well-balanced meal plan that
includes correct amounts of certain foods that will manage your
blood glucose level so that it is as close to normal (non-diabetes
level) as possible.
Healthy food choices include eating lots of vegetables and
fruits, eating non-starchy vegetables such as spinach, carrots,
broccoli and green beans. Choosing whole grain foods instead of
processed grain products. Brown rice and brown spaghetti instead of
white. Adding dried beans and lentils to your meals and making sure
that you have fish twice a week. When making meat choices, lean
meats are best and when eating turkey or chicken remove the skin.
Choose non-fat dairy or non-fat yogurt and non-fat cheese. Liquid
oils should be used in cooking instead of solid fats. Everyone
should be more careful about portion sizes; especially those who
are trying to lose weight.
You should contact your eye doctor immediately if you notice blurred vision that lasts longer than 2 days, you suddenly lose vision in one or both eyes, or you see black spots, cobwebs or flashing lights (that are not really there).
Caring for your feet when you are diabetic:
If your blood vessels in your feet are damaged you will not be able to receive adequate amounts of blood in your feet. Damage to blood vessels in your feet can cause you to experience numbness or painful tingling in your feet. A lack of blood supply can compromise your ability to fight off infection in your feet.
Diabetes Information
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Stay away from high calorie snack foods and desserts.
Weight Loss:
The sad fact is that 9 out of 10 individuals who have been
recently diagnosed with diabetes are overweight. If you are
diabetic and are overweight, losing some weight can help you to
better manage your diabetes. When you decide to lose weight your
first step should be to speak with your doctor. Your doctor can
give you healthy guidelines to losing weight successfully.
Exercise:
We all should exercise on a daily basis because when we exercise
we help our bodies to digest food better. Exercise is any activity
that gets you up and moving.
Sometimes the toughest part of exercising is taking that first
step.
There are different types of exercising: aerobic exercise,
strength training, and flexibility exercises.
Walking is an excellent exercise for anyone because it improves
circulation and your mobility; it promotes weight loss and can even
help you to reduce your stress level.
Lifestyle:
Your lifestyle not only includes your work, home life and what
you do for fun but it also includes those health habits you have
acquired like if you smoke or drink, use recreational drugs etc.
Your lifestyle includes your eating habits and your risks that you
take such as if you drive a sports car or bungee jump. A diabetic
needs to consider their lifestyle and evaluate if anything about
their lifestyle is detrimental to controlling their diabetes? If
there are factors about their lifestyle that may hurt their changes
for controlling their diabetes such as consuming alcohol or smoking
they need to seriously consider avoiding or at least cutting down
these habits if they want to remain in control of their
diabetes.
Diabetes and Your Health
02/02/2012
American Diabetes Association Names Robert E. Ratner, MD, FACP, FACE as Organization's Chief Scientific and Medical ...
ALEXANDRIA, VA-- - The American Diabetes Association announced today that Robert E. Ratner, MD, FACP, FACE has been named Chief Scientific and Medical Officer, effective May 7, 2012. Dr. Ratner is currently ...
American Diabetes Association Names Robert E. Ratner, MD, FACP, FACE as Organization's Chief Scientific and Medical ...
02/02/2012
Diabetes helped by any exercise
LONDON, Feb. 3 (UPI) -- Intermittent exercise with and without low oxygen concentrations can improve insulin sensitivity in those with type 2 diabetes, British researchers found.
Diabetes helped by any exercise
02/02/2012
Ulcer-causing bug tied to higher diabetes risk
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who have been infected with the ulcer-causing bacteria Helicobacter pylori are more than twice as likely to develop diabetes later on as people who do not have signs of the infection, according to a new study of Latino adults in California. The results don't prove that the bug causes diabetes, but "it is strongly related to predicting type 2 diabetes," said ...
Ulcer-causing bug tied to higher diabetes risk
02/02/2012
Diabetes rates vary widely in developing countries, 1 in 10 cases untreated
( Drexel University ) Rates of diabetes vary widely across developing countries worldwide, according to a new analysis led by Dr. Longjian Liu of Drexel University's School of Public Health.Worldwide, four in five people with diabetes now live in developing countries. Liu's study found that access to healthcare support for diabetes varied widely in developing countries, and that one in 10 ...
Diabetes rates vary widely in developing countries, 1 in 10 cases untreated
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