Dr White

Is diabetic urine, sweet?


 Is it possible that all diabetic urine is sweet?

The answer is: not really, not all diabetics will have urine sugar.

Why would a good person urinate sugar?

Could it be that when you eat too much sugar, the excess sugar appears in your urine?

No, the real problem is the insulin in our body.

Our body is like a society filled with wailing beater-cells.

Every day, the various delicacies we eat are broken down and absorbed into the bloodstream by the digestive system, becoming a take-out order ready for delivery, such as glucose.

The pancreas (in the islets) is the delivery platform, which will send the most reliable takeaway worker - insulin - immediately after the meal, to get on the beloved scooter and run up in flames.

If there is some extra glucose that is not delivered, the insulin delivery boy will store it in the warehouse - the liver - first. But if the warehouse is full and the liver can't hold it anymore, it will be converted into fat.

But sometimes the unexpected happens: a bug in the takeaway system.

Some people are born with a weak takeaway platform (islets) or have acquired physical abnormalities that cause the takeaway platform system to operate poorly.

In this case, the delivery platform can not send enough insulin delivery boys, resulting in a lot of delivery glucose always can not be delivered, too much blood sugar become body waste. This situation is similar to type 1 diabetes.

There are also some things that can accelerate the takeaway system out of order.

The first : when we eat too much and have a chronic calorie surplus, it's like the system is bursting at the seams and there simply aren't enough insulin takeaways.

The second: lack of exercise, the body cells are not hungry, and a large number of takeaways are rejected.

If you don't pay attention at this point, then the delivery platform may completely collapse.

With so much blood sugar garbage, the pancreas is in a hurry and immediately sends out all the insulin delivery guys (with increased insulin in the body for a short period of time) to knock on doors day and night to deliver meals.

But the old sugar can't be delivered, and there is a steady stream of new sugar coming in ......

The busy delivery is on the verge of paralysis, and finally it has to go on strike!

The extra glucose rampages through the blood vessels and finally has to be dumped through the body's "sewer system" - the kidneys - and so the urine is filled with glucose.

Save Insulin

There are three countermeasures to deal with a possible insulin crash: exercise + medication + diet.

First, by opening the doors of the muscles through exercise, the body expends more energy and the cells become less resistant to insulin.

Then, to cope with the problem of innate insulin deficiency (not enough takeaways), insulin or glucose-lowering drugs can be injected.                                                                                        

Finally, to cope with the problem of sudden spike in blood sugar (sudden burst of takeaway during peak hours), it is recommended to make changes from the source of diet, such as maintaining a balanced diet, controlling carbohydrate intake and choosing foods with low GI.


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