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The therapy for diabetes aims to alleviate hyperglycemia-related symptoms, prevent acute metabolic decompensation, and reduce chronic end-organ complications. Glycemic control is evaluated through short-term (self-monitoring, continuous glucose monitoring) and long-term (A1c, fructosamine) metrics, enabling near real-time tracking of blood glucose levels and reflecting glycemic control over specific time frames.
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For most patients, experiencing several weeks of polyuria, polydipsia, fatigue, and significant weight loss may indicate the presence of diabetes. Furthermore, adults displaying the phenotypic appearance of type 2 diabetes (particularly those who are obese and not initially insulin-requiring), may have islet cell autoantibodies, suggesting autoimmune-mediated β cell destruction and a diagnosis of latent autoimmune diabetes of adults (LADA). The categorization of glucose homeostasis is...
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Carbohydrates are polymers composed of molecules containing atoms of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. One gram of carbohydrate can provide four kilo-calories of energy, which makes it the most efficient instant energy source.
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Diabetes mellitus is a chronic metabolic disorder characterized by hyperglycemia. The four categories of diabetes are type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes, other specific types of diabetes, and gestational diabetes.
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Post-stroke diabetes management: a qualitative study.

Jonathan Hewitt1, Hala F Azhari2, Martin O'Neill3

  • 1School of Geriatric Medicine, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom.

Frontiers in Neurology
|April 29, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Stroke survivors diagnosed with diabetes face challenges managing their condition. Healthcare teams struggle to provide comprehensive diabetes care post-stroke due to resource limitations, highlighting a need for patient empowerment and tailored education.

Keywords:
diabetesfocus groupshealthcare professionalsqualitative studystrokestroke survivors

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Area of Science:

  • Medical Research
  • Public Health
  • Diabetes Management

Background:

  • Diabetes significantly increases stroke risk, often diagnosed concurrently with stroke.
  • Understanding patient and clinician perspectives on post-stroke diabetes management is crucial.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore stroke survivors' experiences with a new diabetes diagnosis.
  • To identify challenges and opportunities in managing diabetes after a stroke.

Main Methods:

  • Qualitative grounded theory approach.
  • Focus group interviews with stroke survivors and clinicians.

Main Results:

  • Clinicians felt ill-equipped to manage diabetes, advocating for lifestyle changes over medication.
  • Stroke survivors expected clinicians to manage their diabetes, experiencing added burden from the diagnosis.
  • Tensions exist between survivor expectations and clinician capacity due to resource limitations.

Conclusions:

  • Optimizing post-stroke diabetes self-management requires patient empowerment and interdisciplinary collaboration.
  • Tailored educational interventions are essential for fostering self-efficacy and improving health outcomes.
  • Addressing resource limitations is key to providing holistic post-stroke care.