even if u take 100 cal extra than yur required need for your ht and wt
extra energy gets accumulated in body if u dont go for exrcises regularly
u get obesity
obesity bring u insulin resistance
insulin available in body is inadequate for u
u need extra insulin/oral hypoglycemic drugs to treat your diabetes
a poor diet can contribute to type 2 and also sometimes it is hereditary you can get it from your grandparents as well, obesity can cause type 2 or bring on symptoms but if the gene is active and you have it in your family , you need to be checked for it i have it but i am not obese i do exercise and i do eat the thngs i am suppose to its just that when it is in your family and you have a history of it you will always have the change of becoming one yourself , type 2 it can be brought on by a bad diet with fattening foods type 1 you are born with the pancreas doesnt make insulin at all if you are type 1
Eating sweets does not… and will never… cause diabetes. It’s a myth that grew legs of its own and ran. Be selective in what advice you heed on here. *However* If you are predisposed to type 2, you can speed up its diagnosis by eating crap and lack of exercise. Contrarywise, you can slow down its onset by eating right and taking care of your health. Sweets plays a part in type 2 onset, but in itself will never cause the disease. Type 2 is primarily genetic, so if there is type 2 diabetes in your family, you should be careful with food and lifestyle choices, you may be predisposed. Eating right is never a bad idea! Type 2 is not as direct as type 1 in its target, and cousins, nephews and grandchildren are all within its reach.
A healthy/unhealthy diet will never play a role in type 1. Type 1 diabetics become such due to genetics (very direct – parent/child, sibling/sibling); your body erroneously identifies the insulin making cells (islet cells) as enemy or foreign cells, and destroys them… kind of the way they do when you have a cold… it’s why your cold goes away. This is often, but not always, preceded by an indeterminate virus. By indeterminate, I mean it’s not the same virus from person to person, nor is the length of time between virus and diabetes onset.
I don’t know why mystical was downthumbed, he’s not that far off.
Hey Maria, go ask your Doctor and get the real answers from him or her. That way should you have more questions they’re there to answer you.
even if u take 100 cal extra than yur required need for your ht and wt
extra energy gets accumulated in body if u dont go for exrcises regularly
u get obesity
obesity bring u insulin resistance
insulin available in body is inadequate for u
u need extra insulin/oral hypoglycemic drugs to treat your diabetes
a poor diet can contribute to type 2 and also sometimes it is hereditary you can get it from your grandparents as well, obesity can cause type 2 or bring on symptoms but if the gene is active and you have it in your family , you need to be checked for it i have it but i am not obese i do exercise and i do eat the thngs i am suppose to its just that when it is in your family and you have a history of it you will always have the change of becoming one yourself , type 2 it can be brought on by a bad diet with fattening foods type 1 you are born with the pancreas doesnt make insulin at all if you are type 1
Eating sweets does not… and will never… cause diabetes. It’s a myth that grew legs of its own and ran. Be selective in what advice you heed on here. *However* If you are predisposed to type 2, you can speed up its diagnosis by eating crap and lack of exercise. Contrarywise, you can slow down its onset by eating right and taking care of your health. Sweets plays a part in type 2 onset, but in itself will never cause the disease. Type 2 is primarily genetic, so if there is type 2 diabetes in your family, you should be careful with food and lifestyle choices, you may be predisposed. Eating right is never a bad idea! Type 2 is not as direct as type 1 in its target, and cousins, nephews and grandchildren are all within its reach.
A healthy/unhealthy diet will never play a role in type 1. Type 1 diabetics become such due to genetics (very direct – parent/child, sibling/sibling); your body erroneously identifies the insulin making cells (islet cells) as enemy or foreign cells, and destroys them… kind of the way they do when you have a cold… it’s why your cold goes away. This is often, but not always, preceded by an indeterminate virus. By indeterminate, I mean it’s not the same virus from person to person, nor is the length of time between virus and diabetes onset.
I don’t know why mystical was downthumbed, he’s not that far off.