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Chapter 1
In This Chapter
Getting a grip on diabetes
Controlling calories
Working exercise into your schedule
Keeping your blood pressure down
Making lifestyle changes that count
Since the third edition of Diabetes Cookbook For Dummies came out, there have been a number of studies that indicate that a Mediterranean diet may be beneficial in the prevention and treatment of diabetes. In this new edition, we provide some of the rationale for that type of diet. You will also find 25 new recipes from some of the finest Mediterranean restaurants in the country. In this chapter, you get the latest information about what diabetes means, how diabetes is diagnosed, and the things you need to do to thrive with diabetes. Don't waste another minute. Get started right away.
With so much diabetes around these days, you may think that recognizing it should be easy. The truth is that it's not easy, because diabetes is defined by blood tests. You can't just look at someone and know the level of glucose - blood sugar - in his or her blood.
The level of glucose that means you have diabetes is as follows:
A diagnosis of diabetes requires at least two abnormal levels on two different occasions. Don't accept a lifelong diagnosis of diabetes on the basis of a single test.
A fasting blood glucose between 100 and 125 mg/dl or casual blood glucose between 140 and 199 mg/dl is prediabetes. See Dr. Rubin's book Prediabetes For Dummies (Wiley). Most people with prediabetes will develop diabetes within ten years. Although people with prediabetes don't usually develop small blood vessel complications of diabetes like blindness, kidney failure, and nerve damage, they're more prone to large vessel disease like heart attacks and strokes, so you want to get that level of glucose down. Sixty million people in the United States have prediabetes.
The American Diabetes Association has added a new criteria for the definition of diabetes, based around a person's A1C number. A1C is a measure of the average blood glucose for the last 60 to 90 days. If the A1C is equal to or greater than 6.5 percent, the person is considered to have diabetes.
The following list describes the three main types of diabetes:
If your blood glucose isn't controlled - that is, kept between 70 and 139 mg/dl after eating or under 100 mg/dl fasting - damage can occur to your body. The damage can be divided into three categories: irritations, short-term complications, and long-term complications.
Irritations are mild and reversible but still unpleasant results of high blood glucose levels. The levels aren't so high that the person is in immediate life-threatening danger. The most important of these irritations are the following:
These complications can be very serious and lead to death if not treated. They're associated with very high levels of blood glucose - in the 400s and above. The three main short-term complications are the following:
These problems occur after ten or more years of poorly controlled diabetes or, in the case of the macrovascular complications, after years of prediabetes or diabetes. They have a substantial impact on quality of life. After these complications become established, reversing them is hard, but treatment is available for them early in their course, so watch for them five years after your initial diagnosis of diabetes. See Dr. Rubin's book Diabetes For Dummies, 4th Edition (Wiley), for information on screening for these complications.
The long-term complications are divided into two groups: microvascular, which are due at least in part to small blood vessel damage, and macrovascular, associated with damage to large blood vessels.
Microvascular complications include the following:
Macrovascular complications also occur in prediabetes and consist of the following:
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