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Q: If a person and pancreas does not produce enough insulin the person has?
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If a persons pancreas does not produce enough insulin the person has?

Type 2 diabetes occurs.


What type medicine helps pancres workbetter?

the pancreas supplies insulin, if there is not enough, the person becomes diabetic, so there is medicine available to help the increase of insulin in the pancreas, such as metformin and diamacron, also insulin injection if the patient warrants it.


What hormone are in the pacreas?

insulin is created in the pancreas, when there is not enough insulin created for the body then the person (or animal) becomes diabetic with a need for medication prescribed by the physician (or veterinarian).


How do you get type1 diabetes?

There is no known cause for type 1 diabetes. It is caused by the pancreas not being able to produce enough insulin for a person's body. Scientists are researching causes and possible cures for it, so hopefully they will find something out soon!


How does the body respond to a increase in the blood sugar concentration?

The pancreas, it releases insulin.


How does hypocalcemia prevent insulin secretion?

To release insulin from the endocrine pancreas cells, the vesicles in the cell need calcium to bind to the internal cell membrane and eject their contents into the blood stream. If a person (or animal) is hypocalcemic (has low blood calcium levels), there isn't enough calcium in the pancreas cell to release the insulin.


A malfunction of hormonal secretions from the pancreas may require a person to?

Receive daily injections of insulin. This is because produces insulin, and if anything goes wrong with the pancreas, the body still needs of supply of insulin.


How is it that the insulin stops working and or doesn't produce enough?

This question consists of two separate sections. The insulin made in a person's body may become less effective if a phenomenon known as insulin resistance develops. Genetic and environmental factors interact to make insulin less effective at the level of the cell membrane, so that excess fats and sugars in the blood are not used appropriately. The body's first response to insulin resistance is to produce more insulin in specialized areas of the pancreas known as beta cells. Over time, beta cells become less able to produce insulin, and blood sugars may continue to rise.


Hormone responsible for diabetes?

If the body does not have enough insulin, then one can get diabetes. If the cells can not use the insulin the body has very well, then one can get diabetes. If one has diabetes, then the doctor might say to use insulin. If the body has too much insulin, then the cells store energy in the cells as fat. When a person is overweight, that is one of the main symptoms of diabetes. If the body and cells use insulin well to control blood sugar level, then the person is not diabetic.


How the assimilation of glucose by a non diabetic person differs from that of a person suffering from diabetes?

It's important to note that there are two types of diabetic people, literally called Type 1 and Type 2. Type 1 diabetics do not produce insulin, while Type 2 diabetics are resistant to insulin. While the reason for it is different, the commonality is that diabetic people effectively lack the insulin that normal people use to regulate their blood sugar levels. For a non-diabetic person, when their blood sugar rises their pancreas secretes insulin to help break down the glucose, and when their blood sugar is low their production of insulin slows. For a diabetic person, this system is malfunctioning, which causes them to either not produce enough insulin or not properly utilize what they have.


What gland produce insulin?

It's not a gland, but an organ called the pancreas. It is a vital organ that produces insulin which picks up dextrose (sugar) that is running through the blood to organs in your body, with your brain taking 60% of this food. When a genetic defect makes a persons body attack the pancreas (instead of the virus that is in the body at the time) and its insulin cells, it destroys all the insulin cells making the person unable to obtain sugar into the organs. This is a very serious disease called type 1 Diabetes and that person receives synthetic insulin through MIT (Multiple Injection Therapy) or a pump that is attached to them constantly for the rest of their life, to compensate for what the body doesn't produce.


What is diabetes myelitis?

Diabetes mellitus (commonly referred to as diabetes) is a disease of the pancreas, an organ behind your stomach that produces the hormone insulin. Insulin helps the body use food for energy. When a person has diabetes, the pancreas either cannot produce enough insulin, uses the insulin incorrectly, or both. Insulin works together with glucose (sugar) in the bloodstream to help it enter the body's cells to be burned for energy. If the insulin isn't functioning properly, glucose cannot enter the cells. This causes glucose levels in the blood to rise, creating a condition of high blood sugar or diabetes, and leaving the cells without fuel.