family history diabetes

Is there such thing as latent diabetes?
I have a family history of diabetes, and as I get older, I understand that is a higher risk of adult development (Type II) diabetes. Is there a threshold where the levels of blood sugar reaches a certain point, we develop diabetes? More pressing is the question: Stress may help cause or trigger diabetes? I understand that high levels of stress can trigger adrenaline. Is there a cause and effect between these two factors
Stress can contribute to diabetes in which cortisol and stress hormones, others block the action of insulin. Less insulin means more sugar in the blood. There are probably other ways of stress at work, too, that not yet fulfilled.
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Preventing a Heart Attack (Factors Contributing to Heart Disease, Risk Factors, and Controls) [VHS Video] $99.95 (VHS Video) This program examines heart disease through the eyes of a young man who's at risk of a heart attack because of a family history of the disease. The program explains the four major factors that contribute to heart disease: smoking, cholesterol, high blood pressure, and lack of physical activity. The program compares risk factors and their significance and discusses which can be controll... |
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The Links to Chronic Kidney Disease Diabetes, High Blood Pressure, and Family History $24.96 ... |
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At Home With Gladys Knight : Her Personal Recipe for Living Well, Eating Right, and Loving Life $13.75 More than a cookbook...an inspirational guide for readers with diabetes!Gladys Knight doesn't have diabetes, but the disease is never far from her mind. Her mother, Elizabeth Knight, died of complications in 1998 after living successfully with diabetes for 40 years.Following her mother's death, Gladys started the Elizabeth Knight Fund with the American Diabetes Association to help people living wi... |
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Diabetes Rising: How a Rare Disease Became a Modern Pandemic, and What to Do About It $12.99 Nearly 90 years after the discovery of insulin, with an estimated $116 billion spent annually on the medical treatment of diabetes in the United States, why is diabetes the one major cause of death that’s been relentlessly rising for a century? Diabetes Rising investigates why the nearly two dozen medications approved for type 2 (adult-onset) diabetes, and all the high-tech treatments for ty... |
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The Fight to Survive: A Young Girl, Diabetes, and the Discovery of Insulin $9.99 In 1919, when 11-year-old Elizabeth Evan Hughes was first diagnosed with what we now know is Type 1 or juvenile diabetes, the medical community considered it a death sentence. In The Fight to Survive, Caroline Cox weaves the heart-wrenching story of Hughesâ role in a medical discovery that stopped the disease in its tracksâonly weeks before her imminent death. The only account of one ... |
