Tag Archive | "insulin"

Diabetes What Type Of Insulin Is Right For Me?

Monday, December 21, 2009

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Rapid onset-fast acting insulin Rapid onset-fast acting insulin always looks clear. It is fast acting and starts to work within one to 20 minutes. It peaks about one hour later and lasts from three to five hours. When you use this type of insulin, you must eat immediately after you inject. The two rapid onset-fast acting insulin types currently available are 1. NovoRapid Insulin Aspart 2. Humalog Lispro. Short acting insulin Short acting insulins always l...

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Does Alcohold Decreases The Risk Of Diabetes?

Monday, December 21, 2009

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Drinking Alcohol Really Does Decreases the Risk of Type 2 Diabetes Among Older Women It is absurd. For the longest time, we have believed that alcohol has no real benefits. However, recently, a study has found that drinking moderate amounts of alcohol really does decreases the risk of Type 2 Diabetes, and this is especially true among Older Women! There are 20.8 million children and adults in the United States, or 7 of the population, who have diabetes. While an estimated 1...

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Is Diabetes Linked To Nutrition?

Monday, December 21, 2009

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Perhaps no other disease is as closely linked to nutrition as diabetes. Not only does nutrition play a role in its development, nutrition is also one of the diseases most powerful treatments.1 Because of this strong and critical connection to nutrition, researchers have carefully studied the use of nutritional supplements in the treatment of the disease. They found that many vitamins, such as vitamin C and the B vitamins, minerals such as chromium, as well as herbs like Gymn...

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Coping with Diabetes

Monday, December 21, 2009

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There are a lot of factors that can help to attribute to diabetes

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Type 2 Diabetes Review

Sunday, December 13, 2009

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In todays world type 2 diabetes is the most common form of diabetes. Type 2 Diabetes is a metabolic disorder that is mainly distinguished by insulin resistance, relative insulin deficiency, and hyperglycemia. In type 2 diabetes, either the body does not produce enough insulin or the cells neglect the insulin. Insulin is very much necessary for the body to be able to use sugar. Sugar is the important fuel of the cells in the body, as insulin takes the sugar from the blood into the cells. It is speedily increasing in the this modernized world, and there are some evidence that this pattern will be followed much in the world in future years. In U.K. about 3 out of 100 people aged over 40, and about 10 out of 100 people aged over 65, have Type 2 diabetes. It is also very common in South Asian and African-Caribbean people.

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