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| How does one get diabetes [ view printer-friendly format ] | Sunday, July 06, 2008 |
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How does one get diabetes
No one knows why people develop diabetes, but once diagnosed, the
disease is present for life. It is a hereditary disorder, and
certain genetic indicators are known to increase the risk of
developing diabetes. Type 1, previously known as
insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus or juvenile-onset diabetes,
afflicts five to ten percent of diagnosed cases of diabetes.
This type occurs most frequently in children and adolescents, and
is caused by the inability of the pancreas to produce the insulin
needed for survival. Type 2, previously called
non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus or adult-onset diabetes,
affects the other 90-95 percent of all diagnosed cases of
diabetes, many of whom use oral medication or injectable insulin
to control the disease. The vast majority of those people (80
percent or more) are overweight; many of them obese as obesity
itself can cause insulin resistance.
Certain characteristics put people at a higher risk for
developing Type 2 diabetes.
Of all the risk factors, weight is the most important, with more that 80 percent of diabetes sufferers classified as overweight. | ||
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