What is diabetes?
Diabetes is a condition where your body is not able to turn the food you eat into energy. Your body needs insulin to unlock your body’s cells and turn the food into energy. Your entire body is made up of these tiny cells, all different kinds depending on where they are in your body.
Insulin is something called a hormone, which is a chemical messenger inside your body. Without insulin, the food you eat cannot get into your cells, and instead that food gets stuck in your blood, making your blood sugar high.
There are several types of diabetes. Type 1 diabetes is a condition that happens when the immune system attacks the cells in your pancreas that make insulin. The immune system is supposed to help fight off colds, viruses, and things like that, but sometimes it attacks your own body by mistake. For people with type 1 diabetes, insulin is required every day to stay alive. About five to ten percent of people with diabetes have type 1.
For type 2 diabetes, the problem starts where the cells put up a wall and do not let the insulin in. Then the body starts working harder to make more insulin, and over time stops making it all together. Then people with type 2 diabetes need insulin, just like people with type 1. About 90 percent of people with diabetes have type 2.
There are also some other less common types of diabetes where you need different types of medicines, but type 1 and type 2 are the most common.
Useful Links
Children and diabetes | Diabetes UK