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Review Article



The classical Biomarkers to Predict Diabetes Mellitus

Junapudi Sunil, Yasodha Krishna Janapati, Syam Sundar Junapudi.



Abstract
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Diabetes mellitus is metabolic disorders; depicted by elevated blood glucose levels ascribed to a futile, scanty or sojourns production of insulin. Enduring complications of the disease have been related to peripheral vascular problems, steering to cardiovascular diseases, stroke, diabetic retinopathy, nephropathy and foot. Precise monitoring of these complications and early therapy stages will allow improvement in prevention and treatment approaches. The availability of measurable, accurate and reproducible biomarkers allow the patient to receive timely enactment of personalized therapies and circumventing harmful blood sugar fluctuations that ultimately progress to life-threatening impediments. Profound knowledge of these biomarkers released by extracellular vesicles in metabolic diseases and other disease condition may guide the development of novel therapeutic approaches to restore the affected pathogenesis, rather than merely treating the symptoms.
With advent of method that can isolate (ultracentrifugation, affinity-based capture, size exclusion chromatography/filtration, polymer precipitation) and characterize (protein quantification, transmission electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, ELISA, nanoparticles tracking analysis, flow cytometry, western blot) from body fluids have become a major diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers not only in diabetes, in other conditions like cancer, neurodegradative disease.

Key words: Biomarkers, diabetes mellitus, blood glucose, metabolic diseases







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030405060708091011120102
20252026

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