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The process of developing diabetes
- The food we eat passes through a 9-meter-long tube connecting the stomach, small intestine, large intestine, and anus, and then exits as feces.
- 2. All absorbed substances from the food passing through the tubes go to the liver, and the liver converts them into glucose.
- 3. Glucose circulates in the blood and returns to muscle cells.
- 4. Glucose alone cannot enter the cell, so insulin helps it enter.
- 6. Insulin is released from the pancreas whenever food enters.
- 7. After the liver converts nutrients absorbed from food into glucose, insulin puts the glucose into the cells within two hours.
- 8. If food is consumed frequently, insulin becomes exhausted and starts to stop working.
- 9. Glucose cannot enter the cells and remains in the blood.
- 10. This phenomenon is called 'insulin resistance'.
11. When insulin resistance develops, glucose cannot enter cells, so a large amount of glucose remains in the blood even two hours after a meal.
- 12. The glucose left in the blood like this ruins the condition of the blood vessels.
- 13. Blood vessels become hardened as if pickled in sugar, causing blood clots to form.
- 14. The liver converts glucose remaining in the blood into fat and stores it.
- This is called fatty liver.
15. People usually imagine fatty liver as fat adhering to the area around the liver, but it is a form where fat fills the storage space of liver cells.
16. If fat fills the workspace where the liver needs to work, it cannot function properly and begins to malfunction.
- About 1 in 100 people with fatty liver develops liver cancer.
- 18. There is so much glucose in the blood that glucose may remain even after filling the liver with fat.
- 19. Remaining glucose is excreted in the urine
- 20. When glucose is excreted in the urine, diabetes is confirmed through a 'blood test' or 'urine test'.
- 21. When you have diabetes, the pancreas produces the necessary amount of insulin, but due to insulin resistance, it cannot properly deliver glucose to the cells.
- 22. If glucose cannot be delivered to cells with 20% efficiency due to insulin resistance, an insulin injection is used to inject five times the amount of insulin to achieve 100% efficiency.
- 23. When there is a lot of glucose in the blood, the blood becomes thick.
- 24. The heart pumps strongly to circulate thick blood
- 25. Meaning of developing high blood pressure
- 26. High blood pressure puts a burden on the kidneys, which filter the blood.
- 27. Thick blood continuously enters the kidneys due to high blood pressure, and the kidneys malfunction, reducing their ability to filter blood.
- 28. Once the kidneys lose function, they cannot regenerate.
- 29. The reason why most people who have suffered from high blood pressure and diabetes for a long time end up undergoing dialysis due to chronic kidney disease
- 30. It is named because diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia commonly occur together.
- 31. This is called 'metabolic syndrome'.
- 32. There is no cure for metabolic syndrome
- 33. Medicine given by the hospital is not a cure.
- 34. High blood pressure medication serves only to lower blood pressure, not to treat high blood pressure.
- 35. Diabetes medication is not a cure but merely provides insulin, and hyperlipidemia medication also only serves to lower cholesterol levels.
- 36. In other words, prescribing symptom relievers rather than cures.
- 37. Moderate exercise and dietary management (eating small portions) are the treatments for metabolic syndrome.
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