Diabetes is a deficiency disease

Unlike what we all think diabetes is a deficiency disease. Deficient supply of glucose to target organs and organ systems is the trigger factor forcing body to sustain high glucose level in blood stream. All living organisms have several inbuilt updated automated mechanisms developed through out the course of evolution which helps body to keep itself alive. In the initial stage of disease the deficient supply of glucose remains unidentified as the demand is efficiently met by the body by increasing the blood glucose concentration by initiating hunger, increasing the rate of ingestion and depleting fat store and muscles after consuming the whole of its glycogen stores. For long time this deficiency is managed effectively. But as the disease advance that is when the blood supply carried out by the infinitesimally small arteries to the peripheral organs like skin, fasciae and organs (like limbs, skin, eyes; abdomen, kidneys and brain) start shrinking and loosing its elasticity, normal texture and inner wall circumference limiting the blood flow through it and multiplying the scarcity of glucose. This crises puts pressure on the the organism and challenge its life sustaining quality of adaptability acquired through generation apart centuries to transform itself for the nature and move far away from the normal architecture and blue print of nature. These mechanisms may remain unexplainable to human imagination, evaluation or identification through centuries. This revolution stroll to an extend that the life sustaining revolt gradually resist the production of insulin to keep the blood glucose concentration steadily high so that even the least possible quantity of blood passing through the thin arterioles may carry the maximum quantity of energy supply substance to minimize the cell deaths in the periphery.

Increased glucose concentration has no role in diabetic complication! Is this true?

All the complications of diabetes show presence of diminished blood supply (Diminished blood supply is the cause of all the complications, and precisely the dramatic fall in glucose availability adds to the intensity as if like collateral damage. Diabetic ulcers demonstrate the extreme stage of arterial blood supply cut and literal absence of any of the blood components and the heavy demand for glucose to reestablish the damaged tissues almost is proportional to the increased blood glucose concentration of the body.