Answer:
The three hallmarks of diabetes mellitus, are: polyuria, polyphagia and polydipsia. Polyuria, is the excessive production of urine and it is seen when people constantly need to pee. Polyphagia, is excessive hunger, in which, people constantly express their need to eat something. And finally, polydipsia, is excessive thirst, present in diabetics, who constantly feel the sensation of thirst and tend to drink a lot of fluids. When these hallmarks are present, even sometimes without a test, it can be ascertained that a person suffers from diabetes mellitus, or simply, diabetes.
Explanation:
Diabetes mellitus was the term used to define diabetes in general. Diabetes is defined as a metabolic disorder in which, usually, sugar levels are very high in the blood, due to a problem either with production of insulin, or the insulin present being incapable of performing its function. There are three types of diabetes mellitus: diabetes type 1, with onset in youth, and also called insulin-dependent diabetes, type 2, with onset in the adult, also known as non-insulin dependent diabetes, and type 3, which is gestational diabetes. In all three cases, the three symptoms mentioned above appear, and they are the clearest signs of a possible diabetes.
Answer:
Both asymptomatic and infective
Explanation:
The person who is carrying the disease could spread is.
precision and accuracy of patient sample results important to both management of overall quality
Answer:
types 4,8,10
Explanation:
1.
Fibril-forming collagens (I, II, III, V, XI, XXIV, XXVII);
2.
Fibril-associated collagens with interrupted triple helices (FACITs) (IX, XII, XIV, XVI, XIX, XX, XXI, XXII). The FACITs do not form fibrils by themselves but they are associated with the surface of collagen fibrils.
3.
Network-forming collagens (IV, VIII, X) form a pattern in which four molecules assemble via their amino-terminal 7S domain to form tetramers while two molecules assemble via their carboxy-terminal NC1 domain to form NC1 dimers
4.
Membrane collagens (XIII, XVII, XXIII, XXV)