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Fast Fact
A fasting blood sugar at or above 126 mg/dL or a random blood sugar at or above 200 mg/dL is diagnostic of diabetes, according to the official American Diabetes Association definition.
A fasting blood sugar of 100 to 125 mg/dL or a random blood sugar between 140 to 199 mg/dL is diagnostic of prediabetes, according to this same definition.
Prediabetes occurs when a person's blood glucose levels are higher than normal but not high enough to be diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
The name, diabetes mellitus, comes from the Greek words for "to flow through" and "sweet." The Greek physicians used to diagnose the condition by actually tasting the urine. (That's dedication!)
Normally, a hormone called insulin pushes sugar from the blood into the body's cells where it can be used for fuel. The concentration of sugar in the blood remains within a fairly narrow range. If the body stops making insulin (type 1 diabetes), then adequate sugar doesn't get into the cells.
Until June 23, 1997, type 1 diabetes was also called insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM).
Without insulin, muscle and fat begin to be burned for fuel (evidence of this -- ketones -- shows up in the urine). The person feels hungry all the time, but loses weight in spite of increased eating. Without replacement insulin, the person would eventually starve to death. Meanwhile, the concentration of sugar in the blood begins to increase. When the level reaches around 180 mg/dL, the sugar begins to spill over into the urine. This causes the person to make more urine and then to get thirstier, creating an accelerating cycle.
The classic symptoms of type 1 diabetes are increased urination (polyuria), increased thirst (polydipsia), increased eating (polyphagia) and weight loss. Anyone with the classic symptoms should have a blood sugar test as well as a urine test.
Occasionally people also report fatigue, blurred vision, vomiting, abdominal pain, or frequent skin infections.
If the disease remains undiagnosed, symptoms progress to include labored breathing, coma, and death.
People who get type 1 diabetes were born with a genetic predisposition to it. Not everyone born with this predisposition gets diabetes, however. In fact, if an identical twin has diabetes, the other twin gets it only about half the time.
Along the way, some of the predisposed individuals are exposed to something in the environment that triggers the diabetes. This is usually a viral infection. The virus misleads the body's immune system into making antibodies against its own pancreas cells that make insulin. (This is why type 1 diabetes is now also called immune-mediated diabetes.) The insulin-producing cells of the pancreas are gradually destroyed over time. When 90% of them have been destroyed, the person suddenly begins to develop symptoms.
Immune-mediated or type 1 diabetes most often strikes young people, especially between the ages of 5 and 7 (when viruses run through the schools), or at the time of puberty (when so many hormones change). For this reason, it used to be called juvenile-onset diabetes.
About 0.4% of the general public (or one out of 250) will eventually develop type 1 diabetes.
According to the National Diabetes Information Clearinghouse, just over 175,000 children under age 20 in the United States have diabetes.
About 800,000 people in the United States now have type 1 diabetes.
About 30,000 people develop type 1 diabetes each year.
Type 2 diabetes is caused, not by the absence of insulin, but by insulin's not working properly. It is much more frequent in overweight adults over the age of 45, but can occur at any age and weight. There are often no symptoms.
The National Institutes of Health estimates that more than 7 million adults in the United States have undiagnosed type 2 diabetes.
As obesity becomes more common among children, the number of children with prediabetes and with type 2 diabetes has been rising dramatically in recent years.
Smallpox is a viral disease characterized by a skin rash and a high death rate.
Causes and Risks
Smallpox was once found throughout the world, causing illness and death wherever it occurred. Smallpox was primarily a disease of children and young adults, with family members often infecting each other. However, a massive program by the World Health Organization (WHO) eradicated all known smallpox viruses from the world in 1977, except for samples that were saved by various governments for research purposes. The vaccine was discontinued in the United States in 1972. In 1980, WHO recommended that all countries stop vaccinating for smallpox.
In 1980, WHO also recommended that the remaining virus samples be transferred to two WHO laboratories for storage. Those laboratories were the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, and a laboratory in Russia. Russia, however, started a program to produce the smallpox virus in mass quantities, specifically for bombs and other weaponry.
Some believe that other countries such as Iraq, Iran, and North Korea may also hold some stores of the smallpox virus. Researchers continue to debate whether or not to kill the last remaining samples of the virus, or to preserve it in case there may be some future reason to study it.
According to the CDC, since the vaccine has not been administered in the U.S. since 1972, those persons who had received the vaccine in the past are likely susceptible now (as are those who have never been vaccinated). It is not known how long previous vaccinations would remain effective, but it is unlikely that people would still have a high enough level of immunity to protect against the virus.
Risk factors for smallpox include being a laboratory worker who handles the virus (rare), or being in the environment where the virus was released as a biological weapon.
Additional Information
It is conceivable that smallpox could be deliberately reintroduced into the population. Smallpox could be released by aerosol, and it would spread easily because the virus remains very stable in aerosol form.
It would take no more than 50-100 cases to cause legitimate concern on an international level. Emergency measures would need to be taken immediately.
Smallpox is highly contagious from one person to another. It is most contagious during the first week, and is spread from saliva droplets. It may continue to be contagious until the scabs from the rash fall off. It may also be spread from bed sheets and clothing.
Researchers believe that the smallpox infection (if released in aerosol form, under favorable conditions, without sunlight) could remain viable for as long as 24 hours. In unfavorable conditions, the virus may only remain viable for 6 hours. There is clear evidence that shows that the virus can remain viable on bed linens and clothes for significant periods of time.
Prevention
Many people were vaccinated for smallpox in the past -- but the vaccination is no longer given because the virus has been eradicated. According to the CDC, the United States has an emergency supply of the smallpox vaccine. Reportedly, there is currently enough vaccine in the U.S. to vaccinate approximately 6-7 million people. There are additional supplies of the vaccine in other countries.
In 2000, the CDC allocated a large sum of money to a company in Cambridge, Massachusetts for producing approximately 40 million additional doses of the vaccine. At the time production began, the scheduled time of completion was in 2004.
There are some complications associated with the vaccine, should the vaccine need to be given in the future to control an outbreak. Some of these are easily treated rashes, while other potential complications are more serious. The risk of complications is relatively low. (For example, the chance of encephalitis, which could be a fatal complication, is 1 out of 300,000). When smallpox was eradicated, the general population was no longer vaccinated because the potential complications and costs began to outweigh the benefits of taking it.
Symptoms
Smallpox has two forms: 1) Variola major -- which is a serious illness with a mortality rate according to the CDC of 30% or more, in unvaccinated people, and 2) Variola minor -- a milder infection with a mortality rate of less than 1%. The incubation period for smallpox is approximately 12-14 days. The symptoms are:
Rash, raised and pink on the skin, starting centrally and spreading outwards. (First the mucosa of the mouth and pharynx, then face, forearms, trunk, and legs. Rash turns to pus-filled lesions that become crusty on the eighth or ninth day.)
Virus can be seen by electron microscope and by culture.
Low white blood cell count initially, that increases later in the disease.
Low platelet count.
DIC panel can be positive in cases of hemorrhage.
Antibodies turn positive soon after the infection is complete.
Treatment
If the smallpox vaccination is given within 1-4 days of exposure to the disease, it may prevent illness, or at least lessen the degree of illness associated with the disease. Treatment, once the disease symptoms have started, is limited.
There is no agent that has been specifically made for treating smallpox. Sometimes antibiotics are given for secondary infections that may occur. Vaccinia immune globulin (antibodies against a disease similar to smallpox) may help shorten the disease.
If a diagnosis of smallpox were made, exposed persons would need to be isolated immediately. The isolation would include not just the person who contracted the disease, but all other face-to-face contacts with that person.
These individuals would need the vaccine and need to be monitored. Emergency measures to protect a broader segment of the population would have to be implemented immediately, within the recommended guidelines from the CDC and other federal and local health agencies.
Prognosis
In the past, this was a major illness with significant mortality as high as 30%.
If you think you may have been exposed to smallpox, contact your health care provider immediately. Since smallpox has been eradicated, this would be very unlikely, unless you have worked with the virus in a laboratory or there has been an act of bioterrorism.
You may not see an immediate improvement, but if you are going to successfully treat eczema, it is important to break the cycle! Click here to find out how.
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