Please turn JavaScript on

Diabetes In Control. A free weekly diabetes newsletter for Medical Professionals.

Is this your feed? Claim it!

Publisher:  Unclaimed!
Message frequency:  1.31 / day

Message History

Patients treated with corticosteroids for asthma, COPD exacerbations, rheumatologic disease, inflammatory bowel disease, or cancer-related complications often develop significant elevations in blood glucose. In many cases, these patients have no prior history of diabetes. Yet within days of therapy initiation, blood glucose levels can rise dramatically, creating a challenging...


Read full story

A patient finishes a hard workout, checks their glucose monitor, and feels completely confused. Instead of seeing lower blood sugar after exercise, the reading is suddenly much higher. While this reaction may seem alarming, it is actually a common response to intense physical activity in people with diabetes. Certain workouts can trigger stress hormones that push glucose into...


Read full story

Growing evidence suggests that diabetes risk may involve more than genetics, diet, and physical inactivity alone. Researchers are now studying whether environmental chemicals could influence metabolic health in ways that contribute to insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. While the science is still developing, interest in how environmental exposures may affect diabetes risk...


Read full story

Patients with type 1 diabetes already face the daily burden of balancing insulin, food intake, exercise, and glucose monitoring. However, for some individuals, insulin becomes more than a treatment tool. It becomes a method for weight control. This dangerous behavior, commonly referred to as diabulimia, involves the intentional restriction or omission of insulin to lose weigh...


Read full story

A bleeding gumline might seem like a minor dental issue, but researchers are increasingly finding that it can signal much more than a need to floss. Chronic inflammation inside the mouth may influence blood sugar control, cardiovascular health, and even long-term diabetes outcomes. As evidence continues to grow, healthcare providers are paying closer attention to the relation...


Read full story