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Diabetes   Listen
noun
diabetes  n.  (Med.) Any of several diseases which is attended with a persistent, excessive discharge of urine; when used without qualification, the term usually refers to diabetes mellitus. The most common form is diabetes mellitus, in which the urine is not only increased in quantity, but contains saccharine matter, and the condition if untreated is generally fatal. Note: The two major subtypes recognized are diabetes insipidus and diabetes mellitus. In diabetes insipidus there is excretion of large amounts of urine of relatively low density, accompanied by extreme thirst, but the urine contains no abnormal constituent. The more serious form diabetes mellitus (from Latin mellitus, sweetened with honey) is a metabolic disease in which the utilization of carbohydrate is reduced and that of lipids and proteins is increased. This form is caused by a deficiency in insulin (which is mostly formed in the pancreas), and may be accompanied by glucosuria, hyperglycemia, elecrolyte loss, ketoacidosis, and sometimes coma. It has severe long-term effects, including damage to the nerves, the retina, and the kidney, and degeneration of blood vessels which may lead to poor circulation, especially in the limbs, subsequent infection, and eventual loss of limbs. Diabetes mellitus itself has recognized variants, being divided into insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is also called adult-onset diabetes (abbreviated NIDDM), and is the less severe form of diabetes mellitus, occurring mostly in obese individuals over the age of 35. It may be treated by diet and oral hypoglycemic agents, though occasionally serious degenerative effects may develop. Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (abbreviated IDDM), also called type I diabetes, is a severe form of the disease, usually starting when the affected person is young (hence also called juvenile-onset diabetes). In addition to the increased urine (polyuria) common to all forms of diabetes, this form is characterized by low levels of insulin in the blood, ketoacidosis, increased appetite, and increased fluid intake, and may lead to weight loss and eventually the severe degenerative effects mentioned above. Treatment requires administration of insulin and careful regulation of the diet.
Diabetes mellitus, that form of diabetes in which the urine contains saccharine matter.
Diabetes insipidus, the form of diabetes in which the urine contains no abnormal constituent.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Diabetes" Quotes from Famous Books



... of any disease productive of extreme emaciation (e.g., tuberculosis, stricture of oesophagus, diabetes, Addison's disease), such a state of body will furnish a strong ...
— Aids to Forensic Medicine and Toxicology • W. G. Aitchison Robertson

... was ill with diabetes; he had come to Rome to take a treatment, and during these days he did not come ...
— Caesar or Nothing • Pio Baroja Baroja

... in view of the fact that coffee (chicory, too) is practically free from starch. On this score it is inadvisable for diabetics to use any of the many cereal substitutes for coffee. It is pertinent to note in this connection that persons suffering from diabetes may sweeten their coffee with saccharin (1/2 to 1 grain per cup) or glycerol, thus obtaining perfect satisfaction without endangering ...
— All About Coffee • William H. Ukers

... it begins as erythematous, dark-red spots—usually preceded and accompanied by mild or grave systemic disturbance—which gradually pass into gangrene and sloughing; the eventual termination may be fatal, or recovery may take place. As a symptomatic disease, it is occasionally met with in diabetes and in grave ...
— Essentials of Diseases of the Skin • Henry Weightman Stelwagon

... myself to face the prospect of a rival mother-in-law under the same roof with me—and frankly I can't. And your father has simply put his foot down on the idea. As you know he hasn't been very well of late—the doctor says he is threatened with diabetes—so my one thought is to spare him every useless anxiety. He sleeps very badly and doesn't seem able, even at night, to detach his mind from his business worries. If he hadn't had such a bad summer, he might have been able ...
— Life and Gabriella - The Story of a Woman's Courage • Ellen Glasgow

... measure which all should adopt in order to keep themselves in health, but the most important factor in the cure of illness. Dietetics, whether for the victims of gout, pellagra, fever, tuberculosis, or diabetes, is of primary importance; lithia salts, caffeine, and creosote are useless in comparison. The modern tendency is to reject these poisonous remedies altogether, and to substitute the natural remedies of rest, medical gymnastics, hydropathic treatment, and, ...
— Spontaneous Activity in Education • Maria Montessori

... atrophies the muscles of his legs, hangs a weight of fat around his middle, and labels him "out of the running." If he persists in eating and not physically exerting himself, she finally concludes that he is cumbering the earth, and she takes him off with Bright's or diabetes. It does not do him any good to tell her that he was too busy to walk and so had to ride, or that he had no time for exercising; she simply pushes him off to make way for a ...
— Keeping Fit All the Way • Walter Camp



Words linked to "Diabetes" :   polygenic disease, polydipsia, type II diabetes, ketoacidosis-resistant diabetes mellitus, ketosis-prone diabetes, chemical diabetes, bronzed diabetes, dm, juvenile-onset diabetes, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, ketosis-resistant diabetes mellitus, autoimmune diabetes, type I diabetes, adult-onset diabetes mellitus, ketosis-resistant diabetes, latent diabetes, juvenile diabetes, diabetes mellitus, non-insulin-dependent diabetes, growth-onset diabetes, maturity-onset diabetes mellitus, mature-onset diabetes, diabetes insipidus, diabetic, polygenic disorder, ketoacidosis-prone diabetes, maturity-onset diabetes



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