The diet of a persons with Diabetes and hypertension are important. For example a person with hypertension will have to have a low salt and fat intake since the more salt one eats and the more obese a person is can cause blood pressure levels to increase. A person with type 2 diabetes can control their diet since the pancreas is producing insulin even though in a small amount. However with type 1 diabetes one must inject insulin before eating and their food intake must match the amount of insulin injected. Exercise is always beneficial since it keeps your body healthy and functioning well.
Making healthy changes to your lifestyle, including a healthy diet and increased exercise, can increase your chances of controlling diabetes without having to add medication or insulin.
Type 2 Diabetes has no cure but can respond to treatment. Diet and exercise are known to be major factors in controlling diabetes.
yes exercise, weight loss, and a low-sodium diet. sometimes medication is necessary.
diet and exercise
Hypertension means having high blood pressure. There is nothing to "act out". Medication, diet and exercise can help control it.
exercise and a proper diet as well.
you can't prevent diabetes %100. however, by controlling your diet, exercising, and avoid smoking, you will have lower risk for having diabetes.
There is no "cure" yet. The best we can do is control the conditions. In both cases, losing weight and eating a sensible diet helps, along with a reasonable amount of exercise, monitoring of the condition, and possibly medication.
Stanley Mirsky has written: 'Diabetes--controlling it the easy way' -- subject(s): Low-carbohydrate diet, Diet therapy, Diabetes
Metabolic syndrome is a health disorder that leads to hypertension, diabetes, heart disease and stroke. Its main cause is due to obesity, which stems from poor diet and exercise activity.
Excess calories in your diet can lead to being overweight, obesity, diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, stroke.
Yes, it is. Hypertension is the hallmark risk factors for many diseases and conditions, including type 2 diabetes. Not only do they damage your heart vessels but they are two key components in metabolic syndrome, a cluster of symptoms including obesity, a high fat diet, and lack of exercise. Having metabolic syndrome increases your risk of heart disease, stroke, and diabetes