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Revision as of 00:25, 5 April 2004 by Alteripse (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The term diabetes can mean one of two quite different diseases which usually involve excessive urination (polyuria) when untreated:
- the more common "sugar diabetes", diabetes mellitus where the amount of sugar in the blood is excessive; forms include type 1 (almost synonymous with juvenile or insulin-dependent diabetes), type 2 (almost synonymous with adult-onset or non-insulin-dependent diabetes) and gestational diabetes (during pregnancy) as well as many other types of nontransient hyperglycemia
- or the less common "water diabetes", diabetes insipidus, where the body is incapable of concentrating urine, leading to increased urine production, fluid loss and thirst.
The meanings of the descriptors mellitus and insipidus refer to the tastes of the urine in the two conditions (sweet and tasteless respectively) and date back to the days of gustatory urinalysis ("pisse prophecy"). In common modern usage, "diabetes" without the descriptor always (revisor is wary of "always" but has never heard or read an exception) refers to diabetes mellitus. The current medical shorthand term for diabetes insipidus is "D.I."
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