Diabetes is a chronic disease that needs to be taken seriously, and blood resin abnormalities are very common among diabetics, and they’re like the “bad guys” that are coyote, and they’re going to cause great harm to our bodies. When the blood sugar in our bodies rises, it’s as if the calm lake water is disturbed and the blubber is prone to disorder.
Blood resin includes cholesterol, triester glycerine, low-density protein cholesterol (LDL-C) and high-density protein cholesterol (HDL-C). Among them, LDL-C, which we used to call “bad cholesterol,” it’s like a truck full of garbage, “dumping” around your veins, and it’s gonna pile up on the vascular wall, and it’s gonna make the arteries hard. And HDL-C is “good cholesterol,” which is like a hard-working cleaner who can transport the extra cholesterol. Diabetes patients tend to increase “bad cholesterol” because of internal metabolic disorders, while “good cholesterol” may decrease and triester glycerine is often unstable.
What does blood resin surveillance mean to diabetics? It’s like doing a “detection” for our body. Through haematological monitoring, we can detect abnormal changes in blood resin in a timely manner and know in advance whether the blood vessels are being threatened. Once the problem is found, we can take measures to avoid further damage to the blood vessels and to reduce the risk of serious cardiovascular diseases such as coronary heart disease, brain infarction, etc. How often should the blood resin be monitored? If our blubber has been at normal levels, at least once a year. If we’re in the process of defamining, or if we’re in a state of haemoglobin instability, we’ll have to increase the frequency of the examination, as recommended by the doctor, probably every three to six months.
For diabetics, blood resin control targets are stricter. In general, LDL-C is best controlled below 2.6mmol/L, which is even lower if accompanied by high-risk factors such as cardiovascular disease. Triester glycerine should be controlled below 1.7 mmol/L.
Blood resin surveillance is not a problem, it is a crucial step in our health. It’s like putting a little guard in our body, keeping an eye on the movement of blood resin. And I hope that you all will be able to focus on the idea that, according to the doctor’s advice, we’re going to have a regular examination of blubber, a good life, a good diet, a proper amount of motion, and let’s together defeat the two “enemys” of diabetes and blubber and protect our health.