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Diabetes drugs

The Different Types of Diabetes Drugs

If you are suffering from diabetes then you must go to your doctor for regular checkups. Your doctor will be able to advise which form of diabetes treatment is best for you. If your diabetes is not very severe, you may be able to control it by adjusting your diet and lifestyle. However, if your diabetes is more advanced, you may require some diabetes drugs to help control the levels of glucose in your blood. But even if you are taking diabetes drugs, you must still adjust your diet.

Diabetes is the result of the pancreas not producing enough insulin or the body's resistance to insulin. Insulin is needed to break down glucose into energy. When the glucose simply sits in the blood with nowhere to go, diabetic drugs are needed to help remove the excess glucose from the body.

People who suffer from Type 2 diabetes are normally treated by taking oral drugs, which fall under five classifications. These diabetes drugs are either designed to naturally stimulate the body to produce more insulin, or improve how the cells respond to sugar. Most of the diabetes drugs that are availabele today have very limited side effects, but if you should experience any side effects, you must report it to your doctor right away.

The earliest of the diabetes drugs is known as sulfonylurea, which works by stimulating the body to produce more insulin. It has been used ever since the 1990s and doesnt have that many known side effects.

There is another class of diabetes drugs known as biguanides. These are usually used on patients who are overweight. The brand name version of this diabetes drug is known as Metformin, and it encourages the body to better use the insulin that is already available. Biguanides do have a few side effects including nausea and diarrhea. These diabetes drugs work by making the insulin last longer in the body before it is removed. This gives the insulin a greater chance of coming into contact with the sugar in the body. These diabetes drugs can cause stomach problems so it is important to have treatment carefully monitored.

Diabetes drugs that are capable of changing how the body behaves after eating meals belong to the meglitinide class of drugs. These are normally used if the patient notices a very high sugar spike immediately after eating. These diabetes drugs dont appear to have many side effects.

Diabetes drugs that make the body more sensitive to insulin are known as thiazolidinediones. These are thought to cause liver damage on some people and so are best avoided. Newer versions of these drugs are being developed all the time and they are getting safer.

Whatever diabetes drugs you are taking, it is important that you go to see you doctor regularly so that he or she can assess how your treatment is working.