More than 34 million Americans have diabetes, and approximately 90-95% of them have type 2 diabetes. Type 2 diabetes means a person has high blood sugar levels. If you have this condition and don’t know it, you could be risking severe complications.
Recognizing the warning signs of diabetes is important so that you can get the treatment you need. Here are 7 early signs of diabetes:
1. Frequent Urination
A person with diabetes will have high blood sugar. Because of this, the kidneys will try to remove excess sugar out of your blood. When the kidneys work to filter out the sugar, you may need to urinate more frequently.
In particular, you may have to urinate more at night.
2. Constant Hunger
A diabetic person has a hard time getting enough energy from the food they consume. Normally, the digestive system breaks down the food eaten into glucose, a simple sugar that the body uses for energy. A person with diabetes won’t produce enough glucose.
Not enough of the glucose gets moved into the bloodstream. As an effect of this, a person with type 2 diabetes constantly feels hungry. It doesn’t matter how much or how long ago they ate.
3. Fatigue
Energy levels are impacted by type 2 diabetes causing a person who has it to feel tired very often. The little amount of glucose that moves into the body’s cells makes a diabetic tired.
4. Blurry Vision
Another one of the early symptoms of diabetes is blurry vision. If there is excess sugar in the bloodstream, damage could be done to the blood vessels in the eyes.
Blurred vision may happen in one or both eyes. It can also come and go at random. The damage to the blood vessels in the eyes can become so severe that permanent vision loss is possible if diabetes goes on without treatment.
5. Tingling, Numbness, or Pain
If you are experiencing tingling, numbness, or pain in your hands or feet, you could have type 2 diabetes. Diabetes symptoms can come and go. If you experience a tingling sensation that goes away, it still could be cause for concern.
High blood sugar levels will affect your blood circulation causing damage to your body’s nerves. This often leads to pain or a tingling sensation in the hands and feet. This condition is called neuropathy.
Neuropathy can get worse as time goes on, leading to more severe complications. This is why is it important to get treated for diabetes right away…
Continue reading the article and learn more about diabetes on Daisy Linden’s blog.