Type One Diabetes and Hope for a Cure
Diabetics Daily Regimen is Complicated and Could Use Improvement
Hoping For A Cure
Type one diabetes is a disease that affects without warning, as it knows no gender, class, race, or religious limits. Type one diabetes most often takes those afflicted by storm, changing their lives forever. Type one diabetes has no cure, only treatments to keep blood glucose levels regulated and to keep the person who has diabetes healthy and happy. In the last ten years diabetes research has made the treatment of diabetes much more tolerable, yet it would still be a win for scientific research if we could put all the pieces of the puzzle together to find a cure for this chronic disease that affects so many people on a day-to-day basis.
Type one diabetes means that a person is and always will be insulin dependent. When a person does not have diabetes their body makes insulin to counteract the sugars in the foods they eat, but those with type one do not produce insulin. Unfortunately, the only way for those with type one diabetes to take their insulin is through shots or what is called an insulin pump. Either way, a person has to insert a needle into their body to get a regulated amount of insulin because their body lacks this vital substance.
It seems like finding a cure for type one diabetes would be simple, because we know what the problem is. The medical community is well aware that type one diabetes is simply the lack of insulin production which causes the cells in the body to become so inundated with glucose that they cannot function properly, so it would seem to be an easy fix. Unfortunately, type one diabetes isn't easy to cure because it's not as simple as figuring out how to make the pancreas that is responsible for insulin production secrete insulin again. Type one diabetes is an autoimmune disease, meaning that for one reason or another, the body attacks and kills off the insulin producing cells. This means even if doctors were to transplant insulin-producing cells into the diabetic pancreas that they would only work for a limited amount of time, until the body killed off those implanted cells.
There is hope for a cure though, the American Diabetes Association along with the Juvenile Diabetes Research foundation are always raising money to aid in the research for a cure, or at the very least, less intensive daily treatments. With a regimen that consists of five or more pokes for glucose testing a day and two to six insulin injections there is a lot of room for progress to be made, even if a cure cannot be found in the near future.
A diagnosis of type one diabetes changes your life, and the life of all the people who love you. You are forced to look at food very differently, and you learn to live life to it's fullest. With good glucose control, a person with diabetes will likely live as long as one without the disease but good care must be taken to avoid serious complications of long-term high glucose levels. With all of the tools available to manage diabetes and ongoing research there is hope, hope that we'll be able to lessen the impact, hope that we'll be able to cure the millions of people afflicted with this relentless disease.
Published by Rachel Johnson
- Research Report Brings Hope for Cure for Type 1 Diabetes New study brings hope for future treatment of type 1 diabetes.
- Normal Blood Glucose Levels: Are Yours Healthy? Do you want to know if you have normal blood glucose levels? This article will discuss what normal blood glucose levels are, and will help show you how to lower your blood glucose levels.
- Hope for the Future-Islet Cell TransplantationAn article based on Islet transplantation and Diabetes.
- American Diabetes Association's 2009 Tour De CureThe American Diabetes Association, Tour de Cure is helping to raise funds and awareness for this horrible disease with no cure!
- How to Reduce the Pain of Finger Sticks when Testing Blood Glucose LevelsWhen checking blood glucose levels, diabetics can use some strategies and tools to reduce soreness and discomfort.
- Stem Cell Research: Scientific Breakthroughs and Public Controversy
- Juvenile Diabetes / Type One Diabetes
- Understanding Insulin Resistance
- What is Insulin Resistance?
- Insulin Explained in Relation to Types of Diabetes
- Glucophage: Treatment for Insulin Resistance
- Type 1 Diabetes - Trends
- www.YesICanYesYouCan.com - Jay Leeuwenburg's Story of Overcoming Type 1 Diabetes Educates Diabetics and Parents, Entertains Football Fans.www.jdrf.org
- Insulin dependence
- Type One Diabetes
- The Hope For a Cure
