What happens in the body when you have type 2 diabetes
With
type 2 diabetes, the muscles and liver that normally take up blood sugar
and use it for energy begin to lose their sensitivity to the hormone
insulin, a condition known as insulin resistance.
The
pancreas, which contains the insulin-making beta cells, responds to the
body's insulin resistance by churning out even more of the hormone.
Even though insulin levels may increase to a degree, even the increased
amount is not sufficient to prevent blood sugar from becoming too high.
(In contrast, type 1 diabetes is a less-common autoimmune disease that
destroys the insulin-producing cells, although some people don't fit
neatly into either category.)
The excess blood sugar in diabetes
can wreak havoc on blood vessels all over the body and cause
complications. It can severely damage the eyes, kidneys, nerves, and
other body parts; cause sexual problems; and double the risk of heart
attack and stroke.
Eventually, insulin-producing cells can shut down and stop producing the hormone completely. Some people with type 2 diabetes need insulin,
but most don't. (It's type 1 diabetes that requires insulin shots to
survive; about one-third of people with type 2 use insulin.) You may
need to inject insulin to help replace or supplement your own natural
production of the hormone and to help your body overcome insulin
resistance.
Good news about managing type 2 diabetes
The good news is that if you eat healthier carbohydrates and more fiber,
blood sugar drops. And exercise can increase the insulin sensitivity of
muscles, which will then absorb more blood sugar. If diet and exercise
alone won't do it, there are drugs that boost the muscle's sensitivity
to insulin and curb blood sugar.
In the past 10 years a slew of
new drugs have come on the market that control blood sugar in new and
innovative ways. Blood-sugar testing has made huge strides too—some monitors now require only tiny amounts of blood and give results in seconds.
So
much of this illness is under the patient's control. But having that
much control over a disease isn't a cakewalk. You may need to battle
psychological demons to remain motivated over the long haul and learn
how to live with diabetes and still feel alive.
"The good news is
that with diabetes, 90% is up to the patient," says Yvonne Thigpen, the
diabetes program coordinator at Mount Clemens Regional Medical Center
in Michigan. "The bad news is that 90% of diabetes management is up to
them."