The finding, published today in the journal Diabetes Care, could explain why some dogs can be trained to spot the warning signs in patients. Claire Pesterfield, a paediatric diabetes specialist nurse at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge University The research could lead to the development of new medical sensors that can detect changing levels of these chemicals and warn patients about potential symptoms. Dogs may be able to help prevent type 1 diabetes patients' blood sugar levels from dropping Dogs have been observed to have the ability to sniff out the symptoms of low blood sugar in diabetic patients, but what exactly the pups are sniffing has remained a mystery. But a new paper published gives a likely answer: people with low blood sugar smell Specially trained (and often adorable) service dogs are able to alert their diabetic owners to dangerous dips in their it can do so quickly. The only way head symptoms off is for diabetics to check their blood sugar before they start using a blood Courtesy of Cambridge University The findings published by the journal Diabetes Care this week could give further insight into why dogs can be trained to detect the warning signs of low blood sugar, also known as hypoglycemia. The patient with low blood The research could lead to the development of new medical sensors that can detect changing levels of these chemicals and warn patients about potential symptoms dogs are wonderful: new research affirms that dogs can be trained to help detect diabetes .
Following a sequence of pictures accompanied by the captions 'side', 'entree', 'drink', someone has added 'diabetes' underneath person who wrote 'The dog dies' in huge letters over a poster for the film Marley and Me. Stop signs clearly inspire Researchers at the University of Cambridge have identified a chemical exhaled in breath that may flag dangerously low blood sugar levels in people who have type 1 diabetes. They say it could explain why some dogs can be trained to spot warning signs in a severe form of the condition which means sufferers get no warning signs that their blood sugar is nearing crisis levels. Claire Moon, a diabetes nurse from Cambridge has brittle type 1 diabetes herself and was one of the first to receive a dog from the Cataracts can also occur in diabetic dogs because of the effects of increased glucose levels on the lens of the eyes. As the disease progresses, symptoms may become more serious and may eventually become life-threatening if treatment is not instituted. .
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