Yes absolutely, but as with any medical condition, consult with your physician forst just to make sure.
This is not high but it is right outside of normal. It is prediabetic and something should be done before it gets higher, otherwise diabetes may become a reality. This is not high but it is right outside of normal. It is prediabetic and something should be done before it gets higher, otherwise diabetes may become a reality.
There is no way to calculate a carbohydrate intake that will work for every prediabetic patient. Only doctors know this information.
Kelly Anne St. Denis has written: 'Characterization of early islet and salivary gland infiltrate in prediabetic nonobese diabetic mice'
Well, a bit overweight can be a big problem. I no a girl and she is just the smallest atom overweight and she has that.
I was not sure on this one so I had to look it up on line. Here are some sites I found for you to look at one this www.livestrong.com/article/30271-prediabetic-foods-eat-avoid ,alexstrucel.blogspot.com/2011/02/pre-diabetes-and-fruit.html
Yes, a trip to the doctor is necessary. Diabetes may be causing this problem or it may be an early indication that one is prediabetic. Web MD.com will also offer other theories as to what may be causing this damage but a doctor knows for sure.
If you have high blood sugar this could indicate diabetes or at least the beginning stages of it known as prediabetic. I would have your levels checked again and make sure that you do not have sugar before you go to help determine. High blood sugar weakens your organs if left untreated for too long.
Sodium: Under 2,000 milligrams per day. Sugar: 4/5 of a teaspoon per day to keep you from going into a prediabetic state. Scary stuff! Considering most people consume more sugar than that per day. Check out the site below for more info on sugar. http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/archives/2005/08/a_spoonful_of_s.html
A normal fasting glucose level is typically under 100 mg/dL. Levels between 100-125 mg/dL indicate prediabetes, while levels higher than 126 mg/dL may suggest diabetes. Insulin resistance can be assessed by measuring fasting insulin levels or with a glucose tolerance test.
If this answer doesn't shock, well, it should. To everyone in the health field it may not be as much of a shock, but it is frightening if you know even a little about diabetes and it is that the youth in our country, the US, is having an increasingly serious percentage of type 2 diabetes. The reason is 99.9999% preventable and has to do with lifestyle. The high sugar diet and lack of physical activity is a large part of it. The other fatal blow, if you'll pardon the expression, is the alarming high incidence of obesity. That's like a knockout punch, one, two, three. This has serious consequence for their future health and out health system's ability to deal with it. If I said that the rate has been reported to be 30% of school-age children are either diabetic or are prediabetic. Believe it or not!
Few to NONE.You can help to prevent diabetes and heart attacks by AVOIDING sugar, wheat, cereals, and other refined/processed carbohydrates, and exercising, will help you to avoid moving into diabetes.A LIFE STYLE change is called for - Sugar and all other refined/processed carbohydrates are the ENEMY. Lose weight. A Body mass Index of 25 or lower will put you in great shape.Exercise - As little as 30 minutes cardio walking every day. Bad weather outdoors? - Walk up and down a staircase for an exercise routine, and do it up to 30 minutes every day. Better still, if you can afford to, buy a good treadmill.