No.
The types of Diabetes are type 1 with sub type -brittle diabetes, type 2 and juvenile diabetes, type 3 (under research) , and Gestational diabetes during pregnancy.
To get tested for type three diabetes, you have to do a glucose test, fasting, and blood work. It is much like the testing done for type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
Well, I only weigh 100 pounds and i am 12, but i got diabetes when I was 3. I have Type 1 diabetes,,, I don't know about Type 2
Type 2 and 3 is a type of insulin dependent diabetes. Insulin is used in all forms of diabetes for treatment but in type 3 diabetes the body has no means to produce the insulin needed b the body and without continuous injections of the drug the body will shutdown.
your pick
well you cant get type one diabetes from not exercising, but you can get type 3 if you do not exercise and eat lots of fatty things then if you carry on not exercising and eating fatty foods when you have type 3 then you will get type 2.
Type 1 and Type 2. p.s. there is also a type 3
Diabetes is a disease caused by low insulin levels. Type 1 & 2 diabetes deal with insulin produced in the pancreas. Within the past decade, researchers have discovered insulin is also produced in the brain. Type 3 diabetes corresponds with low levels of insulin produced in the brain.
type 3 diabetes
The principal two idiopathic forms of diabetes mellitus are known as types 1 and 2. The term "type�1 diabetes" has universally replaced several former terms, including childhood-onset diabetes, juvenile diabetes, and insulin-dependent diabetes. Likewise, the term "type�2 diabetes" has replaced several former terms, including adult-onset diabetes, obesity-related diabetes, and non-insulin-dependent diabetes. Beyond these two types, there is no agreed-upon standard nomenclature. Various sources have defined "type 3 diabetes" as, among others, gestational diabetes, insulin-resistant type�1 diabetes (or "double diabetes"), type�2 diabetes which has progressed to require injected insulin, and latent autoimmune diabetes of adults. There is also maturity onset diabetes of the young which is a group of several single gene (monogenic) disorders with strong family histories that present as type�2 diabetes before 30 years of age.
I know there is a procedure available for type 1 diabetes that works for 2-3 years (animal transplant that eventually gets rejected by the human immune system) but does it work with type 2 diabetes?
type a, type b There are 3 types of diabetes: Type 1 (when the body stops producing insulin completely), Type 2 (body produces some insulin, but not enough to function properly), and Gestational (occurs in pregnant women and usually disappears after birth).