What is diabetes?
Diabetes, also known as diabetes mellitus, is a chronic health problem that affects your bodyโs ability to produce insulin or use the blood sugar (or blood glucose) effectively.
Blood sugar levels are regulated by a hormone called insulin, which is produced by the beta cells of the pancreas. Insulin is a hormone that helps glucose get into the cells where it’s needed.
The pancreas plays a vital role in diabetes. If a person becomes diabetic, it means that the pancreas isnโt able to produce enough insulin required for the body or cells arenโt able to make proper use of the insulin produced.
What types of Diabetes are there?
Diabetes is broadly divided into three types: type 1, type 2, and gestational.
Type 1 diabetes is a health condition in which your immune system destroys the insulin-producing beta cells of the pancreas, so they don’t make any insulin. It usually develops when youโre a child or teenager, but it can develop when youโre older too.
Type 2 diabetes is a condition in which your cells lose sensitivity to insulin and canโt make use of your blood sugar effectively. As a result, your blood sugar levels go up. Itโs milder and more common than type 1, but it can still lead to serious complications in your eyes, nerves, kidney and heart if itโs not well-controlled. In type 2 diabetes, there are two connected problems:
- Your cells respond poorly to insulin, so canโt make use of the blood sugar effectively.
- And sometimes your pancreas doesnโt produce enough insulin.
Gestational diabetes is when, during pregnancy, your body becomes insulin resistant and so blood sugar levels rise. This type of diabetes usually goes away after you give birth.
Thereโs also a form of diabetes known as โLatent Autoimmune Diabetes of Adulthoodโ (or LADA) which is sometimes informally called โdiabetes 1.5โ. This is currently classified as a form of type 1 diabetes, but shares similarities with type 2 – hence the โ1.5โ. Research is currently being undertaken to find out what seems to make it different from both type 1 and 2 diabetes.
Who gets diabetes?
Type 1 diabetes can affect anyone at any time, but type 2 diabetes is usually acquired later in life. Youโre more likely to get type 2 diabetes if youโre over 40 (or over 25 if youโre south Asian), have a family history of diabetes, or have overweight or obesity. Type 2 is the most common form of diabetes to affect older adults, and being inactive also increases your chances of developing it.[3]
Type 1 diabetes is thought to be caused by an autoimmune reaction that destroys the cells in the pancreas that make insulin, called beta cells. This process can go on for months or years before any symptoms appear. Some people have certain genes that make them more likely to develop type 1 diabetes.
Gestational diabetes happens when your blood sugar gets too high during pregnancy, and your body canโt make enough insulin to regulate it. Like type 2 diabetes, youโre at a higher risk of getting gestational diabetes if youโre overweight or have a family history of diabetes.
How common is diabetes?
A 2016 study suggested that 9% of men and 7.9% of women worldwide could be diagnosed as having diabetes: a number that has risen by 28.5% since 1980.[1] So itโs common, and itโs on the rise. This is generally thought to be because the worldโs population is getting older and heavier.
Type 2 diabetes is more common than type 1โan estimated 90% of people with diabetes have type 2โbut both are for life. But where type 1 is unavoidable, itโs possible to minimise your risk of getting type 2 diabetes by living a healthy lifestyle. As a result, type 2 diabetes is becoming more common, whereas type 1 generally affects the same proportion of people year to year.
In the case of gestational diabetes, itโs estimated that 2%-10% of yearly pregnancies are affected by it. [2]