Double diabetes is a condition in which patients experience symptoms of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Initially, doctors diagnose these patients with having type 1 diabetes, which is an autoimmune disease in which the beta cells of the pancreas have been attacked by the immune system and no longer produce insulin. People with type 1 diabetes usually notice symptoms in early childhood and they require daily, and sometimes, multiple doses of insulin. As their diabetes progress, these people tend to gain weight and they begin to see signs of type 2 diabetes, along with type 1.
This means that even though insulin is available to the cells in the body, the muscles, fats, and other tissues are unable to absorb it and so the sugar needed for fuel remains in the blood and the blood glucose level remains elevated. Type 2 diabetes is not an autoimmune condition, but rather is a metabolic condition that is caused by obesity, genetics, and environmental factors. Mostly adults develop this condition, but any individual that is overweight or is insulin resistant is susceptible. Type 2 diabetes is mostly treated with diet, exercise, and oral medications.
When an individual with type 1 diabetes takes insulin and then becomes insulin resistant type 2, they enter a vicious cycle of double diabetes. They will require careful medical supervision of their medications, meal planning, and daily exercise. They still need to take insulin because their body cannot produce it, yet they need to take medicine because their body cannot absorb it either. Double diabetes is a very dangerous condition that is plaguing more and more people each day.
Diabetes Double Vision
Diabetes double vision occurs when diabetics suffer damage to various nerves in their bodies. When the impairment affects any of the optic nerves or the receptors in the brain, an individual can suffer vision loss or double vision. Some people will see small spots on objects instead of seeing the object in its entirety, while other people may see the figure in double. People view details differently depending on which nerve was touched and how their brain responded. Often times, the brain will try to compensate for the eye’s lack of ability, so after time, they may begin to view things more like they used to before double vision and diabetes. In addition, as nerves regenerate, some sight may return. Blindness, however, that is due to diabetes, is a lifelong condition that is not reversible.
Double Diabetes
Diabetes and double vision can both be treated through medication, but a doctor will tell any diabetic that the first rule in diabetes is to get his or her blood glucose level under control. Sugar levels that continue to be elevated only intensify the situation and hinder progress. Eating right and avoiding sugary drinks like colas and alcohol will benefit this process. The next step is to plan meals according to diabetic guidelines that will help decrease glucose, blood pressure, cholesterol, and triglycerides, as well as raise good cholesterol. Adding exercise is crucial for those people with double diabetes. Some people may be able to reverse their double diabetes and only have to deal with the complications of type 1, while some people may stop their risks of diabetes altogether.