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Juvenile diabetes is an autoimmune distracts which can be because of environmental cause or virus, which obstructs the function of beta cell. Once the beta cells are damaged the body is incapable to produce insulin. Juvenile diabetes mellitus is currently more often known as Type 1 diabetes.
A child with diabetic siblings is more prone to extend juvenile diabetes than the child from a completely unaffected family. It is measured to be a more inherited problem than excess eating or being obese.
The accurate reason of Type 1 diabetes (juvenile diabetes) is still unclear. However, it is understood that Type 1 diabetes outcomes from an infectious on toxic insult to persons whose immune system is hereditarily liable to develop an aggressive autoimmune response either against distorted pancreatic B antigens (proteins) or against molecules of the B cell resembling a viral protein (known as molecular mimicry). Untreated type 1 diabetes can induce a person to go into a coma. The juvenile diabetic lack the assembly of insulin so, sugar builds up high in the blood, overflows into the urine and exceed from the body unused.
Symptoms of Juvenile Diabetes
Symptoms include extreme thirst, hunger, urination, dryness and weight loss. Insulin injections have to be taken every day to maintain blood glucose levels stable.
- Numbness or stinging in the hands or feet.
- Excessive hunger.
- Intense weakness and fatigue.
- Tiredness or lethargy.
- Blurred vision.
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