Although diabetes can't be cured, it can be managed and kept under control. Anyone diagnosed with diabetes should seek treatment immediately to prevent associated illnesses.
Dr Roger Henderson last medically reviewed this article in January 2009.
Although diabetes can't be cured, it can be managed and kept under control. Anyone diagnosed with diabetes should seek treatment immediately to prevent associated illnesses.
Dr Roger Henderson last medically reviewed this article in January 2009.
The type of treatment depends on the type of diabetes.
In both types, dietary measures play a crucial role. Specially trained dieticians can offer invaluable advice on suitable foods - see the Healthy living section.
Type 1 diabetes is treated with insulin and by eating a healthy diet. Insulin can't be taken by mouth because the digestive juices in the stomach destroy it. This means that for most people it has to be given by injections. Most people find giving the injections simple and relatively painless, since the needle is so fine.
How often someone needs to inject depends on what their diabetes specialist has recommended, and which type of insulin they're using. Insulin is given at regular intervals throughout the day, usually two to four times.
Each injection may contain one, or a combination of different types of insulin, which act for a short, intermediate or longer period of time.
Injections can be given using either a traditional needle and plastic syringe, or with an injection pen device, which many people find more convenient.
An automatic insulin pump is available, which means that fewer injections are needed. The needle is sited under the skin, and connected to a small electrical pump that attaches to a belt or waistband and is about the size of a pager. Inside is a reservoir of fast-acting insulin which is delivered continuously at an adjustable rate.
Inhaled insulin recently became available for treating people with a proven needle phobia or people who have severe trouble injecting. It was hoped that this would become a mainstay method of giving insulin, but initial results were not as impressive as hoped, and so this option is now usually reserved for those patients where all other treatment options have failed.
Insulin was first used to treat diabetes in 1921. Under normal circumstances, it's made by beta cells that are part of a cluster of hormone-producing cells in the pancreas.
The hormone regulates the level of glucose in the blood, preventing the level from going too high. Insulin enables cells to take up the amount of glucose they need to provide themselves with enough energy to function properly. It also allows any glucose left over to be stored in the liver.
Most insulin used today is human insulin, although some people still use insulin from cows and pigs. Human insulin is a product of genetic engineering, where bacteria bred in a laboratory are given a gene that allows them to produce insulin. Analogue insulin is another form of artificially modified insulin.
There are six main types of insulin, and each patient requires their own unique combination and dosage. It can take many weeks after starting insulin for sugar levels to stabilise, and it is quite common for different insulin combinations to be tried before optimal treatment occurs. The six types are:
Another recent treatment, known as Exenatide, is also given by injection, but is not an insulin. Given twice daily before morning and evening meals, it works by increasing the levels of body hormones known as ‘incretins’. These are set to play an increasing role in our management and understanding of diabetes as they help to produce insulin when required, reduce appetite, slow down food absorption, and reduce glucose production by the liver. This treatment is usually only initiated by a diabetes consultant rather than a GP.
Type 2 diabetes may have been considered the milder form of diabetes in the past, but this is no longer the case. For many people, type 2 diabetes can be controlled by diet alone. Medication in tablet form is used when diet doesn't provide adequate control.
The different types of tablets work by one of these methods:
Examples of these tablets include:
All tablets used in the treatment of diabetes have potential side effects such as abdominal pains, diarrhoea and low blood sugar (hypos), but the majority of patients taking them are able to find one or more that suits them.
Over time, a careful diet combined with oral medication may not be sufficient to keep the diabetes under control. If this is the case then insulin injections may be recommended.
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