What is Diabetes?
Types of Diabetes
Blood sugar and concerns
Complications and long term effects
Myths or quick facts
100

What does the word "diabetes" mainly refer to?

A disease where blood sugar stays too high.

100

How many types of diabetes are there?

Three: Type 1, type 2, and gestational.
100

What tool do people use to check their blood sugar?

A glucometer.

100

Why is it important to control blood sugar?

To prevent long-term damage to the body's organs.

100

True or False: People with diabetes can never eat desert.

False. They can but in moderation.

200

What is insulin?

A hormone that helps sugar move from the blood into cells for energy.

200

Which type of diabetes is most common in adults?

Type 2

200

What's a common symptom of low blood sugar?

Shakiness, sweating, dizziness, or confusion.

200

Which body part is commonly often affected by nerve damage from diabetes?

Feet

200

What is a normal blood sugar range?

70-100 mg/dl

300

What organ in the body makes insulin?

The pancreas.

300

Which type is considered an autoimmune disease?

Type 1

300

What is a common symptom of high blood sugar?

Excessive thirt, frequent urination, fatigue, or blurred vision.

300

What is a common long-term complication of uncontrolled diabetes?

Kidney disease, vision problems, or heart disease.

300

What does the A1C test measure?

The percentage of hemoglobin coated with sugar.

400

What part of the pancreas produces insulin?

The beta cells of the islet of Langerhans.

400

What type of diabetes occurs during pregnancy and may go away afterwards? 

Gestational diabetes

400

What is the medical term for high blood sugar?

Hyperglycemia.

400

What test measures average blood sugar over 2-3 months?

Hemoglobin A1C test.

400

What is a diabetes specialist/doctor called?

An endocrinologist. 

500

What is the pathophysiological difference between Type 1 and Type 2?

Type 1 involves the autoimmune system destroying pancreatic beta cells. 

Type 2 involves insulin resistance with insulin deficiency/

500

What hormone, other than insulin, helps regulate blood sugar by raising glucose levels when it drops too low?

Glucagon(in the pancreas) signals the liver to release stored glucose into the blood.

500

Compare Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) vs Hyperosmolar Hyperglycemic State (HHS) in one key difference?

DKA occurs in Type 1 (ketone production, metabolic acidosis)

HHS in Type 2 (severe hyperglycemia, dehydration, no significant ketosis)

500

What is the mechanism of diabetic neuropathy?

Chronic high blood sugar damages small blood vessels that nourish nerves, causing lack of oxygen, nerve's insulating layer degeneration, and neuron degeneration.

500

What is the story behind insulin's discovery?

Frederick Banting discovered insulin in 1922. He gave the first injection to a Canadian boy who was comatose due to hypoglycemia. 

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