antidiabetics
Antidiabetics are medicines used to manage diabetes mellitus, a disorder of chronic hyperglycemia resulting from insufficient insulin action. They aim to control blood glucose, reduce complications, and improve quality of life. Treatments are tailored to diabetes type, patient factors, and comorbidities, and may include lifestyle changes alongside pharmacotherapy.
Insulin replaces or substitutes endogenous insulin and is essential for type 1 diabetes; many regimens exist,
Non-insulin agents include metformin (a biguanide), which lowers hepatic glucose production and improves insulin sensitivity; it
Therapy is individualized; metformin is often started first in type 2 diabetes, with other oral agents or
In clinical practice, antidiabetics form part of a comprehensive strategy that includes diet, physical activity, education,