Juvenile Diabetes: How Diabetes May Affect Your Children
Other than these, the disease also entails regular medical treatment and checkups and even some surgical procedures for any complications that may arise. All these could become financially constraining. In fact, some diabetics often experience a worsening of their condition because they fail to comply with the required routine medical treatment. Fortunately, there are different types of health insurance that cover the cost of these medical expenses required to stay healthy despite having the disease.
Frequent or excessive urination is particularly a sign of diabetes insipidus, a form of diabetes that is hormonal in nature, unlike the more common diabetes mellitus, which is due to abnormal levels of insulin and/or resistance to insulin's effects.
What are the signs? There are mainly 2 types of diabetes: type 1 and type 2. Type 1 diabetes: this is the early diabetes which is diagnosed in children only. Basically type 1 diabetes is called juvenile diabetes and most children are on insulin due to this. Insulin keeps them working as it converts the sugar into energy. Moreover, juvenile diabetes is grouped in "auto-immune" diseases with other diseases like sclerosis and arthritis. Type 2 diabetes: this type of diabetes usually occurs in obese adults. But recent research unfolds that youngsters can also be prone to type 2 diabetes. In type 2 diabetes you do not need insulin treatment. It can be controlled with a proper diet and exercise routine only. This mainly happens due to heredity. In this type pancreas produce less amount of insulin in the body.
Type 1 juvenile diabetes symptoms in children are: * recurrent urination * hazy vision * excessive irritation and thirst * vomiting and unsettled stomach * weight loss due to exaggerated desire to have food * extreme weakness and fatigue * difficulty in breathing * feeling of exhaustion or sluggishness * fruity stink on the breath So if your child has any of the above symptoms then you should immediately consult a doctor.
Who hasn't been irritable, after all, or fatigued? But it's the chronic appearance of these symptoms that are worrisome. It's one thing to be fatigued for a day or two, but if you're feeling off for a couple of weeks, it's time to visit the doctor.
The good news is that diabetes responds well to treatment if caught early, especially in adults. If sugar or insulin resistance is the problem, careful control of diet and exercise may be all that's needed to keep the disease in check. For others, medication will also be required. The earlier it's diagnosed, though, the better chance you'll have of dealing with adult diabetes.
About the Author: