Diabetic neuropathy

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    Pathophysiology of diabetic neuropathy Diabetes is a chronic disease that affects blood glucose levels. Diabetes is the loss of pancreatic metabolic activity that is responsible for the use of energy, which comes from glucose that an individual consumes. There are two types of diabetes: Type 1 Diabetes is the failure of pancreas to secrete a hormone called insulin; responsible for the removal of glucose from the body to be used in the muscles for energy. Type 2 Diabetes is the failure of using the

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    Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy Peripheral neuropathy is obviously one of the major complications of chronic diabetes, which affects the nerves and leads to loss of sensation, numbness, and pain in the legs, feet, or even hands. Sadly, peripheral neuropathy is likely to affect approximately 70% of people with diabetes. However, not all people who develop this type of complication experience serious pain. Diabetic peripheral neuropathy is caused by prolonged elevated blood sugar, which affects the

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    Diabetic Neuropathy Definition Diabetic neuropathy is nerve damage that occurs with diabetes. Approximately half of all people with diabetes have some form of neuropathy. It is more common in people who have had the disease for many years. Tight control of blood sugar can prevent neuropathy from occurring. Those who already have diabetic neuropathy can stop it and prevent it from becoming worse with healthier eating habits, medications and exercise. Diabetic Neuropathy Causes In people who have

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    Management of diabetic neuropathy will reduce the symptoms of the pain and improve the quality of life of an individual. However, it important that clinicians are thorough in clinical evaluation of patients to be aware of the indirect warnings of disease process (Cox, DeGraauw, & Klein, 2016). One cannot design a treatment plan, until a complete history and physical examination are necessary. Armed with extensive information about diabetes, signs, complications, and cognizance to make appropriate

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    Diabetic Foot Problems

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    What are Diabetic Foot Problems and why do they occur? Foot problems are a big risk in diabetics therefore diabetic patients must constantly monitor their feet or face severe consequences, including amputation. With a diabetic foot, a wound as small as a blister from wearing a shoe that's too tight can cause a lot of damage. Because diabetes decreases blood flow, injuries are slow to heal as new blood often doesn’t flow freely to the injury. When wounds do not heal in a timely fashion, they are

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    Assess the VM202 in Painful Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy Introduction Diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) is the most common type of diabetic neuropathy (NIH, 2009). Chronically high levels of blood sugar lead to nerve damage not only in the extremities, but also in other parts of the bodies. This damage occurs in an approximate 60% to 70% of all diabetic patients, eventually, developing into peripheral neuropathy (WebMD,2013). These damaged

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    or insulin can be required (Diabetes UK 2012). This case study states at what stage he was diagnosed, and what were his present risk factors. The main factors contributing to diabetes is obesity, there also other pre-diabetic risk factors such as ethnicity, poverty, and age. Obesity has become a major factor also known as an increased BMI (body mass index). The world Health Organisation has mentioned that by 2015, 2.3 billion people will be obese. In UK alone the rates have doubled in the

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    the patients that I have encountered are diagnosed with Diabetic Neuropathy (DN). Diabetic Neuropathy is a brought about by a complication of Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes. In 2012, there are about 29.1 million Americans, or 9.3% of the population, had diabetes (American Diabetes Association [ADA], 2016). Due to its increase

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    DIABETIC FOOT ULCER 3 Research question: What are the contributing factors in developing a diabetic foot ulcer in Type 2 diabetics in the community? An estimated 16 million Americans are known to have diabetes and a substantial amount more are at risk for developing this disease. In Americans, approximately 3-6% of the population has diabetes (AADE, 2014). As you age, Type 2 diabetes begins to rise affecting how your body metabolizes glucose. With Type 2 diabetes, glucose

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    One of the most common long-term complications of diabetes mellitus is painful neuropathy. Diabetic neuropathy is estimated to affect about 60-70% of all diabetes patients and can lead to foot ulcers, amputations, and decreased quality of life. The most common form is chronic peripheral neuropathy which results in pain and numbness in the extremities, usually described as a burning, tingling, or steady aching pain.1 Patients may also feel increased sensitivity to pain or experience paresthesia, a

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