See Also: uranium-234-uranium-238 dating(encyclopedia)
uranium(dictionary)
uranium(dictionary)
uranium(encyclopedia)
Uranium(medicine)
uranium nephritis(medicine)
International Uranium(finance)
uranium compounds(medicine)
uranium-thorium-lead dating(encyclopedia)
pregnancy complications(medicine)

Complications of Diabetes (health) and uranium (sh)


Complications of Diabetes (health)


Harmful effects that may happen when a person has diabetes. Some effects, such as hypoglycemia, can happen any time. Others develop when a person has had diabetes for a long time. These include damage to the retina of the eye (retinopathy), the blood vessels (angiopathy), the nervous system (neuropathy), and the kidneys (nephropathy). Studies show that keeping blood glucose levels as close to the normal, nondiabetic range as possible may help prevent, slow, or delay harmful effects to the eyes, kidneys, and nerves.





uranium (sh)




Chemical element of the actinide series (with many transition element properties), chemical symbol U, atomic number 92.

A dense, hard, silvery white metal that tarnishes in air, it is isolated from such ores as pitchblende. Until the discovery of the first transuranium element in 1940, uranium was believed to be the heaviest element. Radioactivity was discovered in uranium by A.-H. Becquerel. All its isotopes are radioactive; several have half-lives long enough to permit determination of the age of the Earth by uranium-thorium-lead Dating and uranium-234-uranium-238 Dating. Nuclear fission was discovered in 1938 in uranium bombarded with neutrons, and the self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction, the atomic bomb, and the generation of nuclear power followed. Uranium has various valences in compounds, some of which have been used as colours in ceramic glazes, in lightbulb filaments, in Photography, and as dyes and mordants.