the body and Diabetes 

In this film, we will explain how your body processes food and I recommend that you give all the cells in your body the energy they need, and what happens if you have diabetes this system is not working properly. If you eat foods that contain broken carbohydrates in the stomach and digestive tract, which is a type of sugar. Sugar.


 We need glucose in food because that is what gives us energy. Carbohydrates that contain food are things like starchy foods, sugary foods, milk, and other dairy and fruit products. This glucose enters the bloodstream and the body finds out if the blood sugar level rises. In response, the pancreas, a small organ that lies beneath the stomach, begins to secrete hormones called insulin and insulin that help our body absorb energy from the food we eat. The blood circulates and absorbs the sugar and insulin all the cells in our body need. for glucose to enter.


 Therefore, blood sugar levels begin to drop but blood sugar levels can be raised at any time by removing extra stored sugar. Blood glucose increases and the pancreas produces more insulin to transport blood sugar through the blood cells, opening the doors and allowing sugar to enter. The body works well with blood glucose at the right level. Don’t like it when your blood glucose is too high. There is usually a cycle in the body that balances glucose and insulin levels and these are found in food, pancreas, and liver. However, for some people, the system does not work well and they develop diabetes. 


Two Type 1 and type 2.
With type 1 diabetes, the body does not make any insulin. This is due to the automatic response when the body has removed the insulin-producing cells from the kidneys. We do not know exactly why that happens to some people but not to others. Type 1 diabetes covers 10% of cases. It is most common in 40 years and under 40 and is the most common form of diabetes mellitus in childhood. 


 That glucose then enters the bloodstream. Usually, the body releases insulin to allow that glucose to enter the cells but because in cells but type 1 diabetes is not insulin produced so glucose cannot enter the body cells at all, so the blood sugar level rises and rises. The body tries to lower blood sugar, trying to remove glucose from the kidneys. This is why people who do not get type 1 diabetes often go to the toilet to urinate. As the kidneys filter the blood sugar, they also absorb most of the water that a diabetic will need. Urine contains a lot of sugar and creates an area where bacteria can thrive and it is very common to get thrush or itchy genitals. 


glucose and more bacteria than usual tend to reproduce on tissue wounds and can take longer to heal. Glucose can also build up inside the lens in front of the eye, making the fluid in the lens cloudy, which does not mean that some people with type 1 diabetes have difficulty seeing. Because glucose cannot get into the cell for intensive use, a person with undiagnosed type 1 diabetes will begin to feel very tired, depressed, and unable to perform his or her normal daily routine. But the body still needs a source of energy for it to function properly so what you are doing is starting to break down its fat tools and that can lead to weight loss. wounds, blurred vision, and weight loss. 


These symptoms usually return quickly within a few weeks and are reversed when insulin is treated with insulin. Type 2 diabetes covers about 90 percent of all cases. It is most common in people over the age of 40 in white people and in people over the age of 25 in South Asia. Type 2 diabetes is complicated because there are so many processes at work. Insufficient insulin or insulin production does not work. due to obesity because an increase in fat can prevent insulin from doing its job properly but it is also possible in healthy people. So in type 2 diabetes, carbohydrate-rich foods are digested into glucose in the stomach and digestive tract as normal.


 That glucose then enters the bloodstream. The pancreas begins to produce insulin that is compatible with blood sugar in all the body cells that need strong glucose. However, glucose cannot always enter cells because the locks on the cell doors are oiled. This means insulin is not able to open the cell doors properly, so blood sugar levels continue to rise. In response, the pancreas produces more insulin so blood glucose levels continue to rise and insulin levels continue to rise. This condition is further complicated by energy-intensive cells - which send emergency signals to the liver to release stored glucose. Increased blood glucose levels and pancreas produce more insulin until they can no longer cope with it and can eventually age.