Manage Your Levels.
Protect Your Future.
Diabetes is a "Silent Killer". Understanding blood sugar, recognizing symptoms, and making lifestyle changes can save your organs from permanent damage.
Why Diabetes Happens
Diabetes occurs when your body cannot properly produce or use insulin, a hormone that regulates blood sugar. This leads to dangerous accumulation of glucose in the blood.
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Insulin Resistance (Type 2)
Your cells stop responding to insulin, leaving sugar in your bloodstream.
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No Insulin Production (Type 1)
The immune system attacks the pancreas, stopping insulin production entirely.
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Genetics & Lifestyle
Family history, obesity, and sedentary habits increase risk significantly.
Major Risk Factors
Recognize the Symptoms
Symptoms can develop slowly over years (Type 2) or quickly (Type 1). Don't ignore these persistent signs.
Frequent Urination
Your kidneys work overtime to filter excess sugar, causing you to pee often, especially at night.
Extreme Thirst
Due to excess urination, your body becomes dehydrated, making you feel unquenchable thirst.
Blurred Vision
High blood sugar pulls fluid from your lenses, affecting your ability to focus.
Slow Healing
Cuts or sores that take a long time to heal due to poor blood circulation and nerve damage.
Diagnosis & Action
Early detection is key. Managing diabetes prevents heart disease, stroke, and kidney failure.
Get Tested (HbA1c)
A simple blood test measures your average blood sugar over the past 3 months. 6.5% or higher indicates diabetes.
Medication
Take prescribed Insulin or Metformin. Never skip doses without consulting your doctor.
Lifestyle Audit
Reduce sugar and carb intake. Focus on fiber-rich foods, vegetables, and lean proteins.
Complications are Preventable
Uncontrolled diabetes damages nerves and organs. Keeping blood sugar in range protects your future.
Living with Diabetes
You can live a long, healthy life with diabetes. It requires discipline, monitoring, and regular checkups.
Weight Management
Losing just 5-10% of body weight can significantly improve blood sugar control.
Foot Care
Check feet daily for cuts or sores. Nerve damage can make you lose feeling in your feet.
Regular Exercise
Aim for 150 minutes of moderate activity per week to help your body use insulin better.
Monitor Levels
Use a glucometer to check sugar levels before meals and keep a log for your doctor.
Common Questions
Type 1 is an autoimmune reaction where the body stops making insulin. Type 2 is when the body doesn't use insulin well and is often linked to lifestyle factors.
There is currently no cure, but Type 2 diabetes can often be managed and sometimes put into remission through diet, weight loss, and exercise.
Avoid sugary drinks, white bread, pasta, processed snacks, and foods high in trans fats. Focus on whole grains, vegetables, and lean proteins.