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Posts tagged ‘insulin’

20
Mar

Where Manufactured “Human” Insulin Comes In


Insulin and Type 2 Diabetes: What You Should Know

The goal of taking insulin injections is to mimic your body’s normal insulin response. People who take insulin eventually need a combination of rapid- or short-acting and long-acting insulins to mimic normal insulin function and to control blood glucose.

A normal pancreas releases insulin constantly, not just when you eat, says John Walsh, P.A., CDE, coauthor of Using Insulin (Torrey Pines Press, 2003). Adults produce about 1 unit of insulin per hour. This is called basal insulin or background insulin.

In response to food, insulin is released from the pancreas in two phases:

1. The first burst occurs within 15 minutes of your first bite in response to rising blood glucose.

2. The second phase happens more slowly, over the next one-and-a-half to three hours, to match the rise in blood glucose from the food you ate, which is called bolus insulin or mealtime insulin.

20
Mar

Insulin and Type 2 Diabetes: What you Should Know


Making the Most Out of Your Own Insulin

To stay healthy with type 2 diabetes over the years, you should aim to control blood sugar, blood lipids, and blood pressure. These are the so-called ABCs of diabetes care — A for A1C (average blood glucose), B for blood pressure, and C for cholesterol (blood lipids). To control blood sugar, you need to match your diabetes care to your body’s waning supply of insulin and level of insulin resistance. Read more »