What
is diabetes mellitus?
Diabetes is a disease in which the body doesn't produce or
properly use insulin. Insulin is a hormone produced in the
pancreas, an organ near the stomach. Insulin is needed to turn
sugar and other food into energy. When you have diabetes, your
body either doesn’t make enough insulin or can’t use its own
insulin as well as it should, or both. This causes sugars to
build up too high in your blood.
Diabetes mellitus is defined as a fasting blood glucose of
126 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL) or more. “Pre-diabetes” is
a condition in which blood glucose levels are higher than normal
but not yet diabetic. People with pre-diabetes are at increased
risk for developing type 2 diabetes, heart disease and stroke,
and have one of these conditions:
- impaired fasting glucose (100 to 125 mg/dL)
- impaired glucose tolerance (fasting
glucose less than 126 mg/dL and a glucose level between 140
and 199 mg/dL two hours after taking an oral glucose tolerance
test)
What are type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
Type 2 diabetes is the most common form. It appears most
often in middle-aged adults; however, adolescents and young
adults are developing type 2 diabetes at an alarming rate. It
develops when the body doesn’t make enough insulin and doesn’t
efficiently use the insulin it makes (insulin resistance).
Type 1 diabetes usually occurs in children and young adults.
In type 1, the pancreas makes little or no insulin. Without
daily injections of insulin, people with type 1 diabetes won’t
survive.
Both forms of diabetes may be inherited in genes. A family
history of diabetes can significantly increase the risk of
developing diabetes. Untreated diabetes can lead to many serious
medical problems. These include blindness, kidney disease, nerve
disease, limb amputations and cardiovascular disease (CVD).
How are insulin resistance, diabetes and CVD related?
Diabetes is treatable, but even when glucose levels are under
control, it greatly increases the risk of heart disease and
stroke. In fact, most people with diabetes die of some form of
heart or blood vessel disease.
Pre-diabetes and subsequent type 2 diabetes usually result
from insulin resistance. When insulin resistance or diabetes
occur with other CVD risk factors (such as obesity, high blood
pressure, abnormal cholesterol and high triglycerides), the risk
of heart disease and stroke rises even more.
Insulin resistance is associated with atherosclerosis (fatty
buildups in arteries) and blood vessel disease, even before
diabetes is diagnosed. That’s why it’s important to prevent and
control insulin resistance and diabetes. Obesity and physical
inactivity are important risk factors for insulin resistance,
diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
How is diabetes treated?
When diabetes is detected, a doctor may prescribe changes in
eating habits, weight control and exercise programs, and even
drugs to keep it in check. It's critical for people with
diabetes to have regular checkups. Work closely with your
healthcare provider to manage diabetes and control any other
risk factors. For example, blood pressure for people with
diabetes and high blood pressure should be lower than 130/80
mm Hg.
AHA Recommendation
Diabetes is a major risk factor for stroke and coronary heart
disease, which includes heart attack. People with diabetes may
avoid or delay heart and blood vessel disease by controlling the
other risk factors. It's especially important to control weight
and blood cholesterol with a low-saturated-fat, low-cholesterol
diet and regular aerobic physical activity. It's also important
to lower high blood pressure and not to smoke.
For information on
hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia, please see the related entry
in this encyclopedia.
Related AHA publications:
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