Type 1 diabetes is an insulin deficiency and accounts for 5% to 10% of all diabetes cases. Type 2
diabetes (insulin resistance) or adult-onset diabetes accounts for 90% to 95%. Although type 1
diabetes is more serious, and type 1 diabetes is rare. Although type 1 diabetes is often called
juvenile diabetes. Type 1 diabetes can occur at any age, but is most common in childhood.
Information about insulin:
Your blood contains food (carbohydrates (or sugar)), oxygen, toxins, and toxins. Blood is where
cells remove waste and receive nutrients and oxygen. To prevent your cells from eating and
dying, your body has a system. That only needs one digestive hormone: insulin. So, to cut down
on the many complicated things that each of your cells has to do. The cells rely on insulin to find
food (sugar). All insulin does is send hormonal messages between sugar (carbohydrate)
molecules
and cells. Allowing cells to find and consume sugar in the blood. Sugar comes in many forms,
many with various vitamins and nutrients. And others without vitamins and nutrients. So, also to
perform other important functions for your body. Insulin is there to clear the complexities that
cells have to deal with. Also, not every cell has a sugar molecule; insulin ensures that some
vitamins and nutrients are. Sugar reaches the right cells. Not every cell contains nutritional
sugar vitamins. Vitamins are often targeted to specific cells. Insulin itself does not lower blood
sugar, cells that eat sugar lower blood sugar. But your cells cannot find sugar with the help of
insulin. After the cell receives the hormonal message to eat sugar added to the cell surface. The
cell transports the sugar molecule to the cell's mitochondria. Where it binds oxygen with the help
of other enzymes to produce energy. Chemical vibrations. The chemical vibrations of
mitochondria keep cells alive. If there's a vitamin or nutrient in that sugar molecule, that
vitamin or nutrient turns. That energy into a function inside that cell. Through a series of
chemical chain reactions caused by that explosion. Sugar from fruits and vegetables always
contains some kind of vitamins or nutrients. Refined sugar. Eating refined sugar is like running
your car on gas to keep the heater running. But your car isn't going anywhere or doing anything
important. To produce that energy, it has to be converted into insulin, enzymes, and huge wastes
of oxygen.
Description of glucagon:
Not only is insulin production disrupted or destroyed in type 1 diabetes. But the hormone
glucagon is also disrupted or destroyed. Glucagon is an important digestive hormone that your
pancreas produces. This hormone sends a message to your liver to produce more sugar from
your body's fat stores. If this hormone isn't produced, your liver never gets the message, and your
blood sugar can. If your blood sugar level drops too low, you die and your oxygen level drops too
low. Remember that you cannot replace oxygen without sugar. People who cannot replace oxygen
are called dead people. That's why type 1 diabetes is sometimes treated with emergency glucagon
injections. If you can't eat sugar pills, candy, or fruit when you're having a low-sugar attack.
When the brain is starved of sugar, it can cause disturbances. Causing the victim to be unable to
eat or drink anything.
Causes of type 1 diabetes:
A common myth is that eating too much sugar causes diabetes. This belief is completely false;
your body needs sugar to carry oxygen. Sugar is the only reason life breathes oxygen today. If we
didn't need sugar for energy, we wouldn't need to breathe oxygen to survive. The inability to
metabolize sugar is a symptom of the disease, not the cause. Sugar and oxygen do not cause
diabetes, it causes lung cancer. The impaired immune response is the main cause of type 1
diabetes. Most people with type 1 diabetes are exposed to this disease. Takes place 2 weeks after
vaccination to protect your body. Your immune system makes antibodies to destroy viruses or
bacteria. That attack islet cells in the stomach by attacking and killing them with antigens.
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