Respuesta :
A few weeks' worth of polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia, and weight loss, together with hyperglycemia, glycosuria, ketonemia, and ketonuria, are typically present in type 1 diabetic children and teenagers. Low renal glucose threshold may be the root cause of isolated glucoseuria, particularly when there is no ketonuria.
What are the initial care for type 1 diabetes?
The age of the child, the ability to provide ambulatory care education, the clinical severity of the child at presentation, and the patient's proximity to a tertiary care facility will determine whether the preliminary treatment and education is given as an inpatient or a primary care and whether this treatment is provided by a pediatric endocrinologist/diabetes team, a cardiologist endocrinologist, or the child's primary care provider. A diabetes team composed of a pediatric endocrinologist, a nurse educator, a nutritionist, and a mental health specialist qualified to offer current pediatric-specific teaching and support should ideally review every child newly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes.
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