What Is Diabetes
Last updated: March 31, 2026
Key Facts
- Over 537 million adults worldwide have diabetes
- Type 2 accounts for 90-95% of all cases
- Prediabetes affects 96 million American adults and 80% don't know
- Type 2 can often be prevented with diet and exercise
- Diabetes is the 8th leading cause of death globally
Overview
When you eat, your body breaks down carbohydrates into glucose. The pancreas produces insulin, which unlocks cells so glucose can enter for energy. Diabetes disrupts this, causing glucose to build up in blood.
Types
Type 1: Autoimmune — immune system destroys insulin-producing cells. Usually develops in children/young adults. Must take insulin daily. Cannot be prevented.
Type 2: Body becomes resistant to insulin. Develops gradually in adults. Linked to obesity and inactivity. Often manageable with lifestyle changes.
Gestational: Develops during pregnancy. Usually resolves after birth but increases Type 2 risk.
Symptoms
- Frequent urination and increased thirst
- Unexplained weight loss
- Blurred vision and fatigue
- Slow-healing wounds
Complications
Uncontrolled diabetes can cause heart disease, kidney failure, vision loss, nerve damage. With proper management, most people live full lives.
Related Questions
Can diabetes be cured?
Type 1 has no cure. Type 2 can enter remission through weight loss and lifestyle changes, but remission is not a cure.
Sources
- Wikipedia — Diabetes CC-BY-SA-4.0
- CDC — Diabetes public_domain