วันจันทร์ที่ 21 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2555

The Dangers of Early-Onset Diabetes

Diabetic Feet :

Early-onset diabetes starts quite early in life, affecting children, teenagers or young adults. It could pose a great danger to the sufferer, especially because its devastating effects on the individual's health continue for life time.

Some of the dangers of early-onset diabetes consist of the following:

1. Damage to blood vessels: The personel could suffer from damage to his blood vessels as a corollary of high blood glucose levels.

Diabetic Feet :The Dangers of Early-Onset Diabetes

2. Cardiovascular disease: The likelihood of the personel suffering from a cardiovascular disease linked with early onset diabetes is quite high. The two major diseases linked with early-onset diabetes consist of coronary heart disease (Chd), as a corollary of fatty deposits in the arteries; and hypertension.

3. Nephropathy: A degenerative disease health of the kidneys known as diabetic kidney disease could occur with time and could lead to renal failure in its end stage (End stage renal disease). When the end stage renal disease (Esrd) occurs the kidney fails. When the kidney fails, the personel is as good as dead because the cost of dialysis is quite expensive.

4. Retinopathy: Deposits of sugar in the tiny vessels of the eyes and on the retina leads to progressive loss of sight or vision. This usually becomes noticeable after about 20years of suffering from diabetes. Gently proliferative retinopathy sets in and this at last leads to blindness.

5. Neuropathy: A degeneration of the nerves also occurs, foremost to loss of feelings or pains on the extremities - hands, feet etc. This could also bring about disease of the extremities foremost to gangrene, and at last to amputation.

6. Risk of infection: Living on daily insulin injection for life could be cumbersome, and at the same time expose the inpatient to the risk of infection at the injection sites; which could corollary in injection abscesses or cellulites.

7. Poor physical and mental development: The personel is likely to suffer from poor physical and mental development as a corollary of poor energy contribute to the organs. Since energy is needed for metabolism and growth, deprivation of the vital organs like the brain, kidneys and heart of the required daily energy, could lead to poor development.

8. Activity intolerance: The inpatient may also not be able to fully share in normal activities; he may not be able to carry out tedious jobs, exercises, etc. There may also be the question of hyperglycaemia alternating with hypoglycaemia when there is inability to strictly cleave to the food and drug regimens. This could be a source of both mental and psychological stress to the patient. These two greatest health challenges could put the inpatient in danger from time to time.

Diabetic Feet :The Dangers of Early-Onset Diabetes

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