Return to IndexStep 1: What is Diabetes?Step 2: Who Gets Type 2 Diabetes?Step 3: How Do You Know if You Have Diabetes?Step 4: You're in Charge! Designing a Treatment PlanStep 5: Monitor Your Blood SugarStep 6: Lose Weight and Follow the Right DietStep 7: Exercise Step 8: Drugs and InsulinStep 9: Treat Low Blood SugarStep 10: Avoid Long-Term ComplicationsKey PointsGlossary
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Return to IndexStep 1: What is Diabetes?Step 2: Who Gets Type 2 Diabetes?Step 3: How Do You Know if You Have Diabetes?Step 4: You're in Charge! Designing a Treatment PlanStep 5: Monitor Your Blood SugarStep 6: Lose Weight and Follow the Right DietStep 7: Exercise Step 8: Drugs and InsulinStep 9: Treat Low Blood SugarStep 10: Avoid Long-Term ComplicationsKey PointsGlossary
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| Negative feedback and insulin production |
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Review Date:
6/24/2011 Reviewed By: Nancy J. Rennert, MD, FACE, FACP, Chief of Endocrinology & Diabetes, Norwalk Hospital, Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc. |
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