-
Malnutrition: 1) After a large amount of body fat is consumed due to various reasons, liver glycogen stores are reduced, which is easy to cause hypoglycemia.
2) Patients with severe muscle atrophy are unable to provide sufficient raw materials for gluconeogenesis in the liver due to the reduced muscle protein content, and it is difficult to maintain normal blood glucose concentration.
3) Spontaneous hypoglycemia may occur in patients with agahophobia nervosa, when the disease develops and severe liver function is damaged.
2) Liver failure: common in severe hepatitis, liver cirrhosis, and advanced liver cancer. The possible causes are:
1) Extensive damage to hepatocytes leads to serious insufficiency of hepatogen synthesis reserves, decreased glycogen decomposition, and gluconeogenesis disorder.
2) The decomposition and inactivation of insulin by hepatocytes is reduced, which increases the plasma insulin level.
3) In liver cancer or cirrhosis, glucose consumption increases, and cancer tissues produce insulin-like substances.
4) The inactivation of estrogen in the liver is weakened, and the content in the blood is increased, which antagonizes the effects of growth hormone and glucagon.
3) Renal insufficiency: The ability of the kidney to have gluconeogenesis under normal circumstances is only 1 20 of that of the liver, and the ability of the kidney to become gluconeogenesis can be greatly increased when starved for a long time, becoming one of the main organs that antagonize hypoglycemia. In renal failure, nephroneogenesis is reduced, and the ability to clear insulin is impaired, and hypoglycemia is predisposed.
4) Hypoglycemic hormone deficiency: mainly including glucagon deficiency, glucocorticoid deficiency, adrenaline deficiency, etc.
-
Hypoglycemia is more complex, with reduced diet, excessive activity, drug effects, and some serious diseases that affect the function of pancreatic islets all lead to a drop in blood sugar and hypoglycemia. The direct cause, the drug factor, the drug is the most common hypoglycemia**. Other factors include too little diet, and for people with poor basic nutritional status, long-term fasting can easily lead to hypoglycemia.
For people with diabetes or other underlying medical conditions, hypoglycemia may be induced by eating less, not eating, delaying eating, or skipping meals. For people with insufficient glycogen stores, strenuous exercise such as running and mountaineering will lead to excessive sugar consumption and can easily induce hypoglycemia.
-
There are many causes of hypoglycemia, such as hypoglycemia in diabetic patients, the common ** is too much insulin injection, or too much dose of hypoglycemic drugs, or too little intake, and then too much exercise, etc., which may cause hypoglycemia; In addition, non-diabetic patients can also develop hypoglycemia, such as pancreatic islet cell tumor or autoimmune hypoglycemia; There is also hypoglycemia caused by severe liver and kidney damage, and so on.
-
Insufficient sugar intake: The amount of sugar absorbed into the blood through the intestine is small, which cannot meet the body's consumption, such as hunger, digestion and malabsorption. It is common in extremely poor areas,** and in people who have had their bowel removed.
Hypoglycogenesis: decreased glycogen synthesis in the liver or impaired glycogenolysis, such as liver disease and glycogen accumulation.
Excessive sugar consumption: It is too late to replenish sugar after consuming too much, such as strenuous exercise, fever, severe diarrhea, renal glycosuria, malignant tumors, etc.
Excessive sugar conversion: Too much insulin causes the sugar in the body to be converted and consumed, causing blood sugar to drop, such as diabetes (excessive use of hypoglycemic drugs), insulinoma patients.
-
1. Improper use of hypoglycemic drugs, such as excessive use of insulin and oral hypoglycemic drugs; 2. Failure to eat on time or small amount of food; 3. Exercising without eating or increasing the amount of exercise; 4. Alcohol intake, especially on an empty stomach.
-
Not being able to eat normally due to strict dietary requirements can lead to hypoglycemia, and not eating in time after drinking a lot of alcohol can also lead to hypoglycemia.
-
There are many causes of hypoglycemia, insufficient sugar intake, insufficient production, and excessive consumption and transformation can lead to a drop in blood sugar.
-
With the history of the overage Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, an era in the United Kingdom has gone, and it is the crown prince Prince Charles who has become the king of the United Kingdom.
1. Heart disease, when a variety of heart problems lead to cardiac diastolic failure, it will lead to a decrease in blood flow rate, a decrease in blood flow through the kidneys, and a decrease in urine filtration rate, which will cause water storage in the body and lead to edema.
2. Kidney disease, the kidneys are the main organs of the human body to discharge water, if there is a problem with the kidneys, it will be difficult for the water and metabolic wastes in the blood to form urine and be excreted from the body, and the edema caused by kidney disease is edema in the loose tissues of the human body, such as eyelids, facial edema, and in severe cases, it will also lead to edema of the fingers.
3. Liver disease, liver disease itself will not cause edema, but albumin, the main substance in the human blood that collects water, is synthesized by the liver, and liver failure will lead to a decrease in albumin content in blood vessels, and water will leak from blood vessels into tissues, which will also lead to edema.
4. Local blood circulation stagnation of the hand, the incidence of this situation is relatively small, due to a variety of reasons resulting in hand vein compression or blockage, it will lead to finger edema.
5. Hand lymphatic system blockage, there is a lymphatic system in various organs of the human body, which is responsible for collecting lymphatic fluid in soft tissues to return to the heart.
No matter which of the above diseases occurs in Charles, it is a major health and life-threatening disease, of course, it is also possible that it is just a normal reaction of old age as Charles said, but the possibility of a normal reaction to this level of swelling is still relatively small.
-
On September 10, Charles was sworn in to succeed to the throne of the United Kingdom, and a Chinese medicine expert saw Charles's red and swollen fingers and said that the qi and blood were not in harmony, the vaporization was unfavorable, and the dampness and heat poison accumulated on the fingers.
Because Prince Charles is not now part of the core of the royal family.
Camilla had no history of marriage before marrying Charles!
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, formerly known as Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor, was known as "Great Britain in the Grace of God." >>>More
Alfred the Great, William II, Henry I, Henry II, Richard I, John, Henry III, Edward I, Edward II, Edward III, Richard II, Henry IV, Henry V, Henry VI, Edward III, Edward IV, Edward V, Richard III, Henry VII, Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary I, Elizabeth I, James VI, Charles I, Charles II, William III, Edward VII, Edward VIII, George VI, Elizabeth II.
Oscar Wilde, born in 1854 and died in 1900, was a playwright, poet, essayist, and 19th-century British genius on a par with George Bernard Shaw. His plays, poems, and ** have left many idiomatic expressions for future generations, such as: Living happily is the best revenge. >>>More