Diabetes & Keeping Fit For Dummies

Overview

The fitness guide no person with diabetes should be without Nearly one in 11 people in the United States are affected by diabetes, a staggering number with both personal and social costs. If you’re one of these millions of people with diabetes or prediabetes, the American Diabetes Association recommends two types of physical activity as primary components of your self-care: aerobic exercise and strength training. Featuring everything from a starter walking plan to strength and resistance training plans, Diabetes & Keeping Fit For Dummies offers all the guidance and step-by-step instruction you need to make exercise a priority in your diabetes management. Exercise improves fitness, increases insulin sensitivity, maintains bone health, helps in weight management, and improves sleep patterns. Who can’t benefit from those things? This informative, down-to-earth guide shows you how to incorporate exercise into your routine, even if you haven’t been in a gym since high school. • Ease your way into more physical activity • Set realistic goals and chart and evaluate your progress • Modify your diet to manage diabetes more efficiently If you’re affected by diabetes, there’s no time like the present to get moving!

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About The Author

The American Diabetes Association funds research to prevent, cure, and manage diabetes; provides objective and credible information; and delivers services to hundreds of communities. Dr. Sheri R. Colberg is a world-renowned Diabetes Motion Expert. She's a frequent lecturer on diabetes and exercise and a consultant for many groups and organizations, including the American Diabetes Association.

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diabetes & keeping fit for dummies

CHEAT SHEET

If you have diabetes, keeping fit is one of the most important things you can do for your health and your blood glucose management. It sometimes requires you to take precautions to exercise safely and effectively. For best results, do some resistance training along with other activities.

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Many people who are stuck at home for one reason or another think they can't work on staying fit, but the truth is that you can get a stronger core and stay fitter without leaving home. You'd be amazed at how easy it is to get fit. Your body core — the muscles around your trunk and pelvis — is particularly important to keep strong so that you can go about your normal daily activities and prevent falls and injuries, particularly as you age.
If you have diabetes, keeping fit is one of the most important things you can do for your health and your blood glucose management. It sometimes requires you to take precautions to exercise safely and effectively. For best results, do some resistance training along with other activities.
Exercise is a crucial part of managing your diabetes. If you've been mostly sedentary, start with mild or moderate exercise and progress slowly to prevent potential problems with any health complications. Brisk walking and other mild and moderate activities are generally safe to start on your own, but if you want to do vigorous activities, see your health care provider first to get checked for complications that certain activities may worsen.
When you're trying to keep fit and manage your Diabetes, you can do many different static stretches to flex your joints. Here are a few simple ones to get you started.Neck stretchIllustration provided by the American Diabetes Association and David Priess. Your neck is one of the main places you tense up when you’re stressed.
Regardless of which type of diabetes you have, you can become resistant to the effects of the hormone insulin, even if you have to pump or inject it instead of making your own. That fact makes insulin resistance relevant to everyone with diabetes of any type or prediabetes. Think of insulin resistance with a lock and key analogy.
Doing resistance training of any type is critical if you have diabetes (or even if you don't have it and want to age well). It allows you to stay strong and independent, along with giving you a place to store the carbohydrates that you eat (that is, in muscles). Here are a few tips to keep in mind as you start resistance training: Do 2 to 3 sets of 10 to 15 reps per exercise.
The human body has to manage its own blood glucose, which it does quite effectively in most people most of the time. You have to have enough glucose in your blood; it's required for your brain and your nerves to function properly. The amount in blood is regulated by a hormone called insulin. This article explains how these two components work.
Keeping fit with Diabetes is more important to living well than you can possibly know. In fact, it's likely the most critical behavior you can adopt to impact how well your insulin works in your body. Insulin resistance is linked to multiple health problems, including type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, reduced blood flow, inflammation, heart disease, and many more.
What's your risk for getting diabetes? It has gone up substantially in the past few decades. In fact, anyone born in the United States from the year 2000 forward has a one-in-three chance of developing diabetes during his or her lifetime, and the incidence is closer to 50 percent if you're part of a minority group (like African Americans, Hispanics, or Native Americans).
Diabetes comes in many forms — type 1, type 2, and gestational are the most common forms — as well as being tied to the related condition prediabetes. The following discussion gives you a glimpse into these conditions. Type 1 diabetes About 5 to 10 percent of people have type 1 diabetes, which equates to around 1.
Some people have symptoms of diabetes or prediabetes before they're diagnosed, but many more never have any or realize that any symptoms they're having are related to diabetes. You need to recognize diabetes symptoms, both the classic and the subtle ones, to ensure that you get the necessary tests.Annual checkups— particularly when you're getting older — that measure your fasting blood glucose are important.
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