Test For Diabetes Nacogdoches TX

By Karin Evans Ten months ago, I wound up in an emergency room when my body began to melt into sugar. I know that sounds melodramatic, but that's what happened. For at least a year I'd been feeling pretty tired, but I kept chalking it up to my late-in-life role as the mother of two young daughters, plus hormonal changes, too many deadlines, and too little sleep. Besides, I was doing a lot of thi...

Igor Evan Matwijiw, MD
(281) 604-1300
250 Blossom St
Webster, TX
Business
Texas Gulf Coast Medical Group Webster
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism

Data Provided by:
Audrey Bettina Miklius
(214) 363-5535
10260 N Central Expy
Dallas, TX
Specialty
Internal Medicine, Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism

Data Provided by:
Robert S Feferman, MD
(214) 596-9302
4324 N Belt Line Rd Ste C204
Irving, TX
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism, Internal Medicine
Gender
Male
Languages
English, Spanish
Education
Medical School: American Univ Of The Caribbean, Sch Of Med, Plymouth, Montserrat
Graduation Year: 1986
Hospital
Hospital: Medical City Hospital, Dallas, Tx; Presbyterian Hospital Of Dalla, Dallas, Tx
Group Practice: Endocrinology Institute -Txs

Data Provided by:
Tom M Thomas
(713) 442-0000
2727 W Holcombe Blvd
Houston, TX
Specialty
Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism

Data Provided by:
Philip R Orlander
(832) 325-7161
6410 Fannin St
Houston, TX
Specialty
Internal Medicine, Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism

Data Provided by:
Stephen John Usala, MD
(806) 358-8437
1215 S Coulter St
Amarillo, TX
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Chicago, Pritzker Sch Of Med, Chicago Il 60637
Graduation Year: 1982

Data Provided by:
Chanhaeng Rhee, MD
(214) 648-4562
5323 Harry Hines Blvd
Dallas, TX
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Kyoungpook University: MD: 2000
Graduation Year: 2000

Data Provided by:
G Murthy Gollapudi, MD PHD
(432) 686-0000
10 Desta Dr Ste 190
Midland, TX
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Graduation Year: 2007

Data Provided by:
Simona Scumpia
(512) 873-7377
2200 Park Bend Dr
Austin, TX
Specialty
Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism

Data Provided by:
V Rodriguez Gonzalez, MD
(713) 790-0116
1213 Hermann Dr Ste 330
Houston, TX
Specialties
Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Pr Sch Of Med, San Juan Pr 00936
Graduation Year: 1989

Data Provided by:
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What You Don't Know About Diabetes...

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By Karin Evans

Ten months ago, I wound up in an emergency room when my body began to melt into sugar. I know that sounds melodramatic, but that’s what happened.

For at least a year I’d been feeling pretty tired, but I kept chalking it up to my late-in-life role as the mother of two young daughters, plus hormonal changes, too many deadlines, and too little sleep. Besides, I was doing a lot of things to take care of myself: eating healthfully, running every day, practicing yoga when I could. But overall, my energy was droopy and getting worse.

I went for a checkup. The doctor did the standard tests, asked the standard questions. “Getting enough sleep?” “As much as I can,” I answered with a shrug. I had other, minor, complaints—blurry vision, numb fingers, a pain in the ball of one foot—and was sent to the appropriate specialists. I was given reassurances, eyedrops, a wrist brace. And so I went home, vowing to pop a few more vitamins, have a massage, get to bed earlier.

Then I started feeling fluish. I figured it was just the generic winter cold or flu, but it hung on for two weeks, then three. A month later I could hardly get out of bed. I began to crave liquids, my feet flopped when I walked, and my mind began to work strangely. My eyes became so blurry that I couldn’t read my computer screen or watch the nightly news. When I stepped on the scale, I found I had lost five pounds, even though I had stopped exercising by this point. The next week I lost five more.

“I think I’m dying,” I said casually to my husband. The colors of the room seemed brighter and my head was filled with German and Mandarin, languages I had studied but didn’t normally speak. “This can’t go on,” he said, so the next day I dragged myself to a new physician.

The doctor listened and sent for the nurse, who pricked my finger and tested my blood. The doctor looked at the results and whistled softly. “You have diabetes,” he said. Then he sent me to the emergency room.

I lay in the ER with an insulin drip in my arm while they did a bunch of tests. Then they told me I had something called diabetic ketoacidosis, which is basically a way station on the road to a diabetic coma. In this state, blood sugar levels are sky high. My reading was 675. Yours, if you are reading this, don’t have diabetes, and have not just consumed a huge banana split, is probably around 80 or 110 max.

The young nurse who took care of me kept shaking her head. “When they said we had a case of ketoacidosis, I kept looking around the ER for someone really overweight and in bad shape. I couldn’t believe it was you.”

“Me either,” I said weakly. It’s not that I thought diabetes was a rare illness. I’d read the statistics. In this country, an estimated one out of three people born in the year 2000 will develop the disease. And I’d heard enough about the complications that can ensue—blindness, heart attack, amputation, and kidney failure—to know that diabetes is a very scary disease.

What I didn’t...

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