Symptom of diabetes 2 Only those type 1 diabetics who have received a kidney-pancreas transplant (when they have developed diabetic nephropathy) and bee insulin-independent may be considered "cured" from their diabetes. The autoimmune attack may be triggered by reaction to an infection, for example by one of the viruses of the Coxsackie virus family. Lack of insulin resistance, determined by a glucose tolerance test, would also be suggestive of Type 1. Continuous glucose monitors are also available to alert the presence of dangerously high or low blood sugar levels. Vacor was withdrawn from the U.S. market in 1979. Diabetes mellitus type 2 is presently of unknown etiology (ie, origin). The onset of the disease is most mon in middle age and later life. Only those type 1 diabetics who have received a kidney-pancreas transplant (when they have developed diabetic nephropathy) and bee insulin-independent may be considered "cured" from their diabetes. These include cardiovascular disease (doubled risk), chronic renal failure (the main cause of dialysis in developed world adults), retinal damage (which can lead to blindness and is the most significant cause of adult blindness in the non-elderly in the developed world), nerve damage (of several kinds), microvascular damage (including erectile dysfunction (impotence) and poor healing which can lead to gangrene and even amputation -- the leading cause of non-traumatic amputation in developed world adults). Only those type 1 diabetics who have received a kidney-pancreas transplant (when they have developed diabetic nephropathy) and bee insulin-independent may be considered "cured" from their diabetes. Symptom of diabetes 2. Research has not been able to establish a connection between autoantibodies, antibodies to cow's milk proteins, and Type 1 diabetes. Type 2 may go unnoticed for years in a patient before diagnosis, since the symptoms are typically milder (no ketoacidosis) and can be sporadic. Fat or muscle cells that do not normally make insulin might possibly have a human insulin gene inserted by geic engineering. Many Type 2 diabetics still produce some insulin internally, and all have some degree of insulin resistance. ^ Camastra S, Bonora E, Del Prato S, Rett K, Weck M, Ferrannini E (1999). |