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At the Clinic – Endocrine System . Heidi Kim Carol Kim. Scenario # 10.
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At the Clinic – Endocrine System Heidi Kim Carol Kim
Scenario # 10 • Patrick was diagnosed with diabetes mellitus on his 8th birthday. His 65-year aunt was just diagnosed with diabetes also. Patrick is having a hard time understanding why he need injections, while his aunt controls her blood sugar with diet and oral medication. Why is his aunt’s treatment different from his?
What is diabetes? • Diabetes is classed as a metabolism disorder. • Metabolism refers to the way our bodies use digested food for energy and growth • Most of what we eat is broken down in to glucose (form of sugar in our blood) • Insulinmakes it possible for our cells to take in the glucose • Insulin is a hormone that is produced by the pancreas.
Type 1 Diabetes • Also known as juvenile diabetes because of its tendency to strike a person in their childhood up to their early adulthood. • Sometimes also known as insulin Dependent Diabetes as a person with this condition is reliant upon insulin injections to survive.
Cause for type 1 diabetes • The cause for type 1 diabetes is usually pancreatic failure due to what is known as an “auto immune” malfunction • Autoimmunity is where our immune system mistakenly attacks realty cells or tissues within the body much in the same way as it would viral infection.
Other symptoms • If blood sugar isn't raised quickly then a person can end up unconscious, in a coma, or even die in a very short space of time. • Increased thirst • Hunger • Tiredness • Increased urination • Blurred vision • Nausea • Possibly even vomiting
Type 2 diabetes • Also known as “adult onset diabetes” because it was thought only adults developed this form of diabetes. • It has been proven false as a number of children throughout the world now developed this type of diabetes.
Cause of Type 2 Diabetes • Unlike like type 1 diabetes it isn't the failure of pancreas but more due to obesity, poor diets, and unhealthy lifestyles. • When people overload themselves with sugar the persistent blood sugar levels, and the insulin and pancreas can struggle to deal with the sugar. • The insulin ushers the sugar into the muscles, but the muscles don’t burn the glucose off because there is no exercise.
Other symptoms Type 2 diabetes symptoms may develop very slowly • Increased thirst and frequent urination. • Increased hunger. • Weight loss. • Fatigue • Blurred vision. • Slow-healing sores or frequent infections. • Areas of darkened skin.
Treatments • Diet • Exercise • other health habits will help to improve blood sugar control