Three Common Diabetes Symptoms
Diabetes is a disease which prevents insulin from being used properly in the body of an otherwise healthy adult or child. Insulin is a critical chemical in the body which helps turn sugar and starches into energy the human body can use. When a person has diabetes his or her body has a difficult time producing enough insulin. The symptoms of diabetes can be nearly unnoticeable at first.
Diabetes is a treatable disease, but without a proper diagnosis it can be deadly. There may be 7 million people or more in the United States who have diabetes but don't even know it. One of the first ways to be on the lookout for this disease is to know some of the more common symptoms:
Increased hunger and thirst: Because diabetes affects how your body digests and handles food, you may actually feel more hungry after a big meal than before you began eating. Since your body isn't getting the full effect of the food you're digesting, your body may feel as though it needs more. Thirst may also be increased due to sugar building up in you body.
Increased need to urinate: The increased thirst of diabetes often leads to increased liquid intake which obviously means more urination. Some diabetes sufferers don't notice the increased urination until they have a night time accident. Indeed, adult bedwetting is one symptom which usually means there is something going on in the body other than simple carelessness.
Increased fatigue: There are a number of reasons you may feel unusually fatigued, but the extra work your body is spending just to process sugar may be one of them. Your body also is not able to get as much energy from sugar and starches, so it may feel as though you're always run down simply because you are!
Diabetes is a serious disease that can grow worse if not diagnosed early and treated properly. There are many subtle symptoms of diabetes, and this list is just a small sampling of what you may feel or experience if you have the disease. The good news is that diabetes is a disease which doesn't have to kill you. You can live and even thrive with diabetes as long as you take care of yourself with some common sense treatments and actions.