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.
not all take shots ok and it is the only way
insulin
Rhenish eat they type the amount of insulin they take. So it helps give them imsulin
Diabetic meals are significant to people that are diabetic or pre-diabetic and would need to eat these certain types of foods to help control their insulin levels. You can find diabetic meal ideas at http://www.diabeticlifestyle.com/
the diabetic would eat into it if they knew but if they didn't his/her blood sugar would go very low.
No, body weight does not increase drom an insulin injection.
A diabetic pump, also known as an insulin pump, is used to regulate the amount of insulin used by a patient. It is an alternative to having multiple insulin injections a day.
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.
You do not become diabetic by injecting yourself with insulin; your body naturally produces insulin. You become diabetic when your pancreas stops working well (or stops working at all.) However, you could lapse into a coma and die if there is too much insulin in your body. Do NOT inject insulin into yourself or anyone else unless told by a doctor to do so.
The use of insulin is lowering the amount of sugar in the blood in diabetic patiens.
Regular Insulin (Humulin R)