How To Assess Your Diabetes Health Risk

Preventing a diagnosis of diabetes is much easier than one might think, especially when it comes to the diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes. If you think that you may be among the millions of individuals who are at risk for developing either Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, it would be best to make an urgent appointment with your primary physician so that a preventative plan can be developed if it’s not already too late. However, here is some basic information on diabetes that you may need to know, and some information about how to prevent the disease as well.


Type 1 versus Type 2 Diabetes: There is a major difference between the two basic diabetes health risks. In the first type of Diabetes, Type 1, the body fails to produce necessary insulin that is required for the body to process glucose from the blood that is eventually converted to glycogen. This type of Diabetes Mellitus usually requires a person to have insulin injections for the time that they have the disease. There are many ways to manage this type of Diabetes health problem and chances are that your doctor will guide you very carefully through the process.


On the other hand, Type 2 Diabetes is the most preventable type of Diabetes between the two types. However, this form of Diabetes Mellitus is when the body does produce insulin, but not enough of it is produced by the body and results in a build-up of the glucose in the blood instead of going to the other necessary cells in the body that need it to fuel energy. While both types of diabetes that have been discussed increases a person’s risk for developing other health problems as well, Diabetes Type 2 increases an individual’s risk for developing heart disease, nerve and kidney damage, as well as blindness.


Diabetes Prevention: Since both Diabetes Type 1 and Type 2 do pose serious health problems for many people throughout the world, it’s very important that individuals do everything they can to prevent it. Doctors and health professionals are now able to diagnose when someone is in the stage of “pre-diabetes,” and this should send a huge flag to both doctor and patient that something needs to be done to help prevent the disease.


A Diabetes prevention program might be in place for those that are borderline Diabetes Type 2, and these program regimens may include activities such as a routine exercise schedules and strict diets that may help the individual. In fact, the American Diabetes Association has conducted research that shows that a simple lifestyle change that includes 30 minutes of exercise each day and some body fat and weight loss can be combined to significantly reduce diabetes and “pre-diabetes” in those patients who are at risk for developing the condition.


In addition to a Diabetes prevention program that might be in place for those who are at risk for developing Diabetes, there are also other things that a person can include in his or her diet to ward off the disease altogether. For example, studies have shown that the incorporation of coffee and green tea beverages in a person’s diet will even tremendously reduce the risk of a person developing a Diabetes health risk.


When it comes right down to it, those who are diagnosed with a pre-diabetes condition and those who think they might be in the process of developing a Diabetes disease, especially Type 2, do have several doors open to them that will aid in the prevention of it. Of course, a patient should always consult his or her doctor before making any decisions at all, and the physician is perhaps the best person to ask about what can be done for one’s Diabetes health condition.

If you have Diabetes you may be interested in checking out Diaberlink

Shoulder Rehabilitation Exercises Are Essentail for Shoulder Health

Don’t wait until you have a shoulder problem, start working on your shoulder joints before anything goes wrong. I’m not talking about lifting weights and exercising the already dominant muscles, what I’m saying is wake up the muscles of the rotator cuff before they let you down.

I recently damaged one of the muscles in my rotator cuff, ended up with a shoulder impingement and was told that I would need corrective surgery. It was then that I started to take an interest and research the subject and discovered that a lot of us ignore this group of muscles until it is too late, me included.  It was shoulder rehabilitation exercises that enabled me to recover from my rotator cuff injury without resorting to surgery. 

A large number of shoulder rehabilitation exercises are aimed at strengthening the rotator cuff, an important but often forgotten group of muscles simply because they are so key to a healthy shoulder.

The shoulder is comprised of a shallow ball and socket joint held together by seventeen different muscles as well as tendons, ligaments and cartilage.  Its complex make up allows us the wide range of movement that we enjoy but also leaves the shoulder prone to injury. The rotator cuff is a group of four muscles which help to keep the shoulder stable by pulling the arm into the socket  and help to prevent dislocation.

The rotator cuff can become weak, through injury, neglect or genereal wear and tear and when it does, it leaves us more susceptible to several different shoulder injuries. A Few quick and easy exercises aimed at this group of muscles can dramatically improve your shoulder health in just ten minutes a day.

Even if the rotator cuff is healthy, strengthening it will dramatically improve the overall performance of your shoulders. If you do lift weights you’ll find that a strong rotator cuff can dramatically increase the weights you can lift

Around thirty percent of us will get a rotator cuff injury at some stage. As you get older the risk increases so it is well worth working on these muscles to prevent a shoulder injury.

Now there is a reasonable chance that if you are reading this article, it is because my advice has come too late. I didn’t even know that these muscles existed until I injured them. Most of us take our good health for granted until something  happens. I am no exception to that rule.

Okay, if you have managed to injure one of yoru shoulders then shoulder rehabilitation exercises are going to feature somewhere in the therapy.

If you have already had surgery then the advice will almost certainly be to get your shoulder moving as soon as possible to avoid frozen shoulder or loss of movement. Obviously, if you have had surgery then you need to follow your doctor’s advice on when to start exercise.

Shoulder exercises will not involve great weights or resistance. If anything thet tend to use either small weights or just the natural resistance of yoru arm and will involve very gentle exercise to start with that gradually increase in terms of frequency and difficulty until the shoulder is back to normal. If you experience pain at any time then you need to stop as this is usually an indication of damage being inflicted.

It is important that before you start to exercise a damaged shoulder let it rest, treat any inflammation and pain with pain killers and anti-inflammatory drugs but most important of all is to allow the healing process to take place before you start exercising. If you ignore shoulder pain you are almost certainly going to make the situation worse. A pulled or slightly damaged muscle that is ignored can result in a major injury needing surgery and months of rehab.

Better still, look after your shoulders before they let you down and whatever you do keep up the exercises after your shoulder is fixed.

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