People who have type 2 diabetes have an increased amount of sugar in their blood, also called blood glucose. Increased blood sugar happens when your body’s insulin doesn’t work as well as it should.
In a recent study published in the journal Pharmacological Research, researchers investigated the synergistic efficacy of two glycemic control drugs – dapagliflozin and semaglutide. They carried out ...
Stem cell therapy is an emerging treatment for type 2 diabetes. Although it’s not yet FDA-approved in the United States, it is a rapidly expanding and promising field of research. Stem cells are ...
Preventing high blood glucose (pre-diabetes) from turning into type 2 diabetes with lifestyle changes could more than halve the carbon footprint associated with treating the complications of the ...
The word “diabetes” serves as an umbrella term covering conditions that share a common symptom—elevated blood sugar—but diverge significantly in their underlying mechanisms, progression patterns, and ...
Diabetes is one of the most common metabolic disorders worldwide, but not all types are the same. Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes differ in causes, age of onset, treatment methods, and long-term effects.