Your toilet knows things about your health your doctor hasn't asked about yet.
First, the color chart nobody shows you.
The color of your pee may be one of the least appreciated diagnostic techniques in
existence.
If it's pale straw to yellow, you're good to go and well-hydrated.
If it's amber-colored, you need to drink some water.
If it's cloudy, you may have a urinary tract infection.
But how it relates to diabetes is more complex and fascinating than most people care to
know.
Yellowish urine alone is not the warning sign.
Diabetes type 2 doesn't make urine turn yellow.
It makes it turn relentless.
It's not the color you need to be concerned with; it's how often you have to use it, how
much you have to use, and what it smells like.
Diabetic pee has a sweet or fruity smell in uncontrolled cases due to the body overproducing glucose it cannot process.
In ancient times, doctors would literally drink pee to diagnose diabetes before any other
testing was available.
The disease was named mellitus, or honey, in Latin. That should make you uncomfortable.
What changes in color actually mean.
Deep persistent yellow means you are dehydrated.
And dehydration is a complication trigger for diabetes.
Diabetic kidneys are already working overtime trying to filter all that glucose.
And that's just creating a cycle of increased urination causing dehydration causing dark
urines causing stress on the kidneys.
Problem causes solution causes problem causes solution.
The symptoms that hide in plain sight alongside the color.
Increased urination of more than 7 times a day
Waking 2 or more times a night to urinate
Your urines are abnormally foamy
You feel thirsty but even when you drink a lot of water, you still feel thirsty You feel tired even after you eat
More Info...
https://www.quora.com/Is-yellowish-urine-a-sign-of-diabetes-type-2
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