Today's Issue: What did you think about World Diabetes Day?
World Diabetes Day was held at the United Nations on November 14, 2007. This is also the birthday of Dr. Banting, one of the discoverers of insulin. This celebration is intended to tout Dr. Banting for his discovery. But today's insulin has deviated so far from where it first began - would Dr. Banting recognize it today? Hopefully the attendees of World Diabetes Day gained an experience worth sharing with Allies Voice. In memory of Dr. Banting, it should be noted that he died in a plane crash in 1941. He was on a mission of high national and scientific importance when the civilian airplane went down in the Netherlands. Allies Voice memorializes Dr. Banting and Dr. Best and shares thoughts on the first ever World Diabetes Day.
- Please support Allies Voice and SUBSCRIBE - it's free!
- The History of Insulin - 4 pages from Insulin: A Voice for Choice
- Dr. Frederick Banting life history
- Dr. Charles Best died March 31, 1978 P.S. Allie Beatty's Birthday: 3/31/78
- World Diabetes Day Highlights Spreading Problem
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11/23/2007 10:16 AM
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11/19/2007 10:53 AM
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11/19/2007 10:52 AM
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Re: Dr. Banting's mission of "high national and scientific importance," was his awareness that C-peptide which was found in Animal-Derived Insulin had a protective and therapeutic role to play in T1DM Management.
Thank you Drs. Banting and Best for helping in giving and preserving Life to those of us with T1DM who are Insulin-dependent.
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Vernon Howard's
SECRETS OF LIFE (R)
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"If you show a small child how to turn his head back and forth in order to see traffic when crossing a street, he will at first do it mechanically. He will move his head because he has been told to move it, not because he sees how his own safety is involved. We must grow beyond mechanical obedience to cosmic principles to see how they connect with our true interests, for then they become our ACTIVE ALLIES. On a hot day it does us no good to think about cool water; WE MUST MAKE THE WATER PART OF US. Consciousness must replace mechanical thought."
Secrets for Higher Success, p. 177
Please visit the Bookstore link at http://www.anewlife.org/html/home.html
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Sing the 'self-care' song 'CURE' for ALL type 1 & type 2 Diabetics ...
"I-eat-less-OFTEN-
I-fast-more-OFTEN"
Posted by BillyWarhol on 22 December 2007
> www.tinyurl.com/2rv87z [LoveDiabetes.com]
'... Hey Nicholas!
I wanted to personally Thank U for pulling all this Info together for Everybody!
I just clicked on 1 Link the SickKids.ca one + interestingly it was that Headline that Screamed Diabetes Breakthrough at me from the Cover of the National Post Newspaper just over a Year ago*
> 1206 www.tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
Needless to say I thought Finally they've got the Frigging CURE!!
Alas they had Cured Mice + also found an Important Trigger to the Sensory Nerves that causes Diabetes*
"Suspecting a link between the nerves and diabetes, he and Dr. Salter used an old experimental trick -- injecting capsaicin, the active ingredient in hot chili peppers, to kill the pancreatic sensory nerves in mice that had an equivalent of Type 1 diabetes.
"Then we had the biggest shock of our lives," Dr. Dosch said. Almost immediately, the islets began producing insulin normally "It was a shock ? really out of left field, because nothing in the literature was saying anything about this."
It turns out the nerves secrete neuropeptides that are instrumental in the proper functioning of the islets. Further study by the team, which also involved the University of Calgary and the Jackson Laboratory in Maine, found that the nerves in diabetic mice were releasing too little of the neuropeptides, resulting in a "vicious cycle" of stress on the islets.
So next they injected the neuropeptide "substance P" in the pancreases of diabetic mice, a demanding task given the tiny size of the rodent organs. The results were dramatic.
The islet inflammation cleared up and the diabetes was gone. Some have remained in that state for as long as four months, with just one injection.
They also discovered that their treatments curbed the insulin resistance that is the hallmark of Type 2 diabetes, and that insulin resistance is a major factor in Type 1 diabetes, suggesting the two illnesses are quite similar."
...
Thanks Again Nicholas for Sharing this Info with us!
Peace* ...'
Hi BillyWarhol & AnyOne else...
Your thanks are acknowledged & most appreciated.
If AnyOne wants the CURE for type 1 & type 2 diabetes then here it is...
First accept the role of inflammation as part of the CAUSE and then remove that inflammation.
Here's how ...
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ONE MEAL A DAY
By consciously & repeatedly, over & over, singing the 'self-care' song ... "I-eat-less-OFTEN-I-fast-more-OFTEN"
... it is increasingly possible, for these lyrics, to train your subconscious mind to better AND better enjoy 1 meal a day [or less] and every day better in every way ... train your body's metabolism to enter into 'healing ketosis' increasingly quickly.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89mile_Cou%C3%A9
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketosis
> 0503 tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/2u88dx [ mattsonm@grc.nia.nih.gov]
REMOVING THE CAUSE
The CAUSE of type 1 diabetes was first published as early as 1938 by Dr Michael Somogyi. Somogyi found that the liver produced above-average plasma glucose concentration aka type 1 or type 2 diabetes ... as a protective safety mechanism to prevent a loss of consiousness following a HYPOglycemic threat to the brain/nerves.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronic_Somogyi_rebound
As insulin 'pumps' plasma glucose concentration, too quickly, into fat, liver & muscle cells ... there is too little left for the brain. The brain instructs Transient Supernormal Glycemia [TSG aka HYPERglycemia aka diabetes] from your LIVER and the diabetes produced ... saves your life.
It's time to love diabetes for what it REALLY is.
HYPOglycemic foods, HYPOglycemic drugs & HYPOglycemic distresses ALL stimulate Diabetic TSG from your LIVER, by your brain, as a protective adaptive reaction to keep You ALIVE.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Somogyi_rebound.GIF
Every time You eat 1 meal a day You can create an amount of islet cell inflammation ... inflammatory to the extent that a HYPOglycemic chemical, EG ... GM insulin, reduces your plasma glucose concentration [PGc] down far too quickly ... ie your choice of meal creates a rise in PGc and the subsequent HYPOglycemic chemical, reducing PGc too quickly, leads to protective islet inflammation and protective reduced islet activity ... ie to protect against the islets contributing extra HYPOglycemic insulin which could result in an extraordinary excessive reduction in PGc and potentially even more of a challenging DISTRESS to the brain/nerves.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabetic_hypoglycemia
If You choose to eat 1 small meal only ... and choose foods that minimize any HYPERglycemic response resulting from the post-meal HYPOglycemic chemical ... Every day Better in every way ... your beta-cell inflammation will be relieved & recover ... especially rapidly if You choose to eat a low or sub15 % carbohydrate meal.
> 0102 www.tinyurl.com/2po68s [duvillie@necker.fr]
How quickly You choose to cure type 1 diabetes is up to You. Its all related to your focus upon reducing the numerous daily [inflammatory] HYPOglycemic threats, from multiple times daily, to ZERO ... every day better in every way.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoglycemia
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IE diabetes is NOT a disease ... diabetes is a protective safety mechanism to protect the brain/nerves from being daily starved of glucose.
> www.tinyurl.com/2459gp [Neuro-Glyco-Penia]
In type 1 the HYPOglycemic danger is greater because of the presence of extra HYPOglycemic distress [including exercise] and HYPOglycemic chemicals such as growth hormone [eg in Children & Athletes]. In type 1 the greater HYPOglycemic danger creates inflammation coupled with a safety switching off of the beta-cells to help maintain consciousness following a meal associated rise in insulin.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Somogyi
THE CURE FOR TYPE 1 DIABETES
Diabetics [type 1 & type 2] and other healthy People should test daily with ChemStrips and pause from eating, reducing insulin to basal sufficient to maintain pH 7.1 or more, and all day every day, better in every way, drink just clean [EG filtered] water, until their urine is glucose free. If more than 23 hours 45 minutes has passed since the previous meal ... and there is still glucose in the urine ... a sub15% carbohydrate meal should be chosen and should be as small as possible [and preferably raw food to minimize leukocytosis] ... all food selected for nutritional value ... and ... to minimize a rise in plasma glucose concentration [as per that Individuals experience with particular foodstuffs]. The less carbohydrate eaten ... the less HYPOglycemic threat ... the quicker the reduction of inflammation [apoptosis] and associated quicker recovery [regeneration] of beta-cell function.
> 0407 tinyurl.com/29kvda [zangend@hadassah.org.il]
> www.TheDiabetesBlog.com/2007/04/19/no-food-no-problem
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Optimal_Diet
> 1206 www.tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
> www.HealSelf.org/Diabetes.html [DrBernarr@aol.com ]
That is how to CONTROL & CURE type 1 & type 2 'diabetes' AND prevent all 'newly diagnosed' type 1 & type 2 diabetes.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apoptosis
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regeneration_%28biology%29
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leukocytosis
> 0130 www.tinyurl.com/ynojqw [Paul Kouchakoff's raw food]
GLUCOSE PRODUCTION ON-DEMAND
By fueling the body, increasingly on ketones, the LIVER can better focus upon gluconeogenesis for supplying an efficient flow of glucose ... out of the liver and into the plasma ... to increase the blood plasma glucose concentration [PGc] ... specifically to help fuel the brain & nerves especially during times of stress & distress.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluconeogenesis
> 0103 www.tinyurl.com/yszb9q [ rortiz1@tulane.edu]
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KETOGENIC DIETS HELP
Ketogenic diets, like 1 meal a day, can help any Diabetic to gently & naturally, reduce their post-meal glucose concentration [PGc] 'slowly & surely' ... which is very beneficial ... because ... since JAN.1966 [and before] it has been proven that relative-HYPOglycemia can result from 'too quick' a reduction of PGC ... resulting in the following neuro-psychiatric symptoms as the body is distressed into 'corrective' methods of preventing nerve/brain tissue from switching-off and/or 'flickering' from the effects of subsequent ... too rapidly reduced cerebral glucose concentration [CGc] aka brain/nerve 'glucose starvation' aka Neuro-Glycopenia ... aka ... the 'Neuro-Glycemic-bends' [NGb] ...
Depression, Insomnia, Anxiety, Irritability, Crying Spells, Phobias, Lack of Concentration, Forgetfulness or Confusion, Unsocial or Antisocial Behavior, Restlessness, Psychosis, Suicidal Behavior; Exhaustion or Fatigue, Sweating, Tachycardia, Anorexia, Chronic Indigestion or Bloating, Cold Hands or Feet, Joint Pains, Obesity, Abdominal Spasm; Headache, Dizziness, Tremor [inward or external], Muscle Pains & Backache, Numbness, Blurred Vision, Muscular Twitching or Cramps, Staggering, Fainting or Blackouts and also Convulsions.
> 0166 'Relative-HYPOglycemia As A Cause Of Neuropsychiatric Illness' @ Journal Of The National Medical Association @ Harry M Salzer MD @ January 1966 @ Vol 58 @ Number 1 @ Table 1 @ Figure 2.
DIABETES FEEDS your BRAIN
http://orthomolecular.org/library/jom/1999/pdf/1999-v14n01-p023.pdf
' ... Because the cerebral glucose concentration [CGc] approaches zero when plasma glucose concentration [PGc] decreases to below 40 mg/dL, 'blood glucose' PGc should be maintained above this level....'
> 1203 www.tinyurl.com/39zu9o [Lori A Markham]
Evidence suggests that being ANYdrugTREATED less OFTEN ... better AND better MORE slowly & naturally reduces blood plasma glucose concentration [PGc], having consequential positive effects upon [brain/nerve] cerebro-spinal glucose concentration [CGc] ... comparable to giving a deep sea Diver time to avoid 'the bends' by too physiologically-quick 'an ascent' ... avoiding 'the glycemic bends', too physiologically-quick 'a descent', can have very positive effects upon Diabetics including all manner of relative-HYPOglycemia associated symptoms.
> www.tinyurl.com/23akqw [Relative-HYPOglycemia]
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-epileptic_seizure
> 0704 www.tinyurl.com/2xx6ps [JML@biostat.bsc.gwu.edu]
> 0124 "Hyperinsulinism and Dysinsulinism" @ J.A.M.A @ Seale Harris @ 1924 @ Vol 83 @ page 729-733.
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Less OFTEN ANYdrugTREATED
FOR better AND better WEIGHT CONTROL
'... Weight gain was a problem with intensive therapy, with an increase of 33 percent in the mean adjusted risk of becoming overweight, a condition defined as a body weight more than 120 percent above the ideal [ 12.7 cases of overweight per 100 patient-years in the intensive-therapy group vs. 9.3 in the conventional-therapy group]. At five years, patients receiving intensive therapy had gained a mean of 4.6 kg more than patients receiving conventional therapy...'
> 0993 www.tinyurl.com/2xbcs8 [DCCT 1993]
> 1188 www.tinyurl.com/2mcvz8 [DCCT 1988]
> 0178 www.tinyurl.com/33q5rt [ndic@info.niddk.nih.gov]
Less OFTEN ANYdrugTREATED
FOR better AND better EYES & KIDNEYS
'... Why some cases of retinopathy worsen when diabetic control improves ... the rate of fall of blood glucose concentration and the accompanying reduction in blood flow have been thought to be the trigger ... This suggestion was supported by the finding of Grunwald et al, who showed a 20% reduction of blood flow when blood glucose concentrations fell from about 15 mmol/l to 8 mmol/l ... This "Normo-Glycemic re-entry phenomenon" has puzzled clinicians ... and ... there is still much to learn about its mechanism ...'
> 1087 www.tinyurl.com/2d48d5 [juangrun@mail.med.upenn.edu]
> 0297 www.tinyurl.com/yu77y7 [m.henricsson@telia.com]
> 1097 www.tinyurl.com/34lyyj [lobnig@med.uni-duesseldorf.de ]
"NORMO-GLYCEMIC re-entry [NGr] PHENOMENON"
'... 3867 newly diagnosed patients with type 2 diabetes, median age 54 years [48–60 years], who after 3 months' diet treatment had a mean of two fasting plasma glucose [FPGc] concentrations of 6·1–15·0 mmol/L, were randomly assigned 'intensive policy' with a sulphonylurea [chlorpropamide, glibenclamide, or glipizide] or with insulin, or 'conventional policy' with diet. The aim in the intensive group was FPGc less than 6 mmol/L. In the conventional group, the aim was the best achievable FPGc with diet alone; HYPOglycemic drugs were added, to rapidly reduce FPGc to 6 mmol/L, only if there were HYPERglycemic symptoms [eg thirst] OR fasting plasma glucose greater than 15 mmol/L...'
> 1098 www.tinyurl.com/38cr65 [Turner UKPDS 33]
> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intensive_insulinotherapy
> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conventional_insulinotherapy
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-diabetic_drug
HARRY SALZER & DEBRA FADOOL
Following the significance of Harry Salzer's 1966 breakthrough reference ... Debra Fadool's 2000 reference may well prove to be one of the MOST influential pieces of research ever done, so far, in the field of depression / dementia / Alzheimer's / 'diabetes' [aka above average plasma blood glucose].
"...Our data suggest that there is a clear differential between the levels of insulin in the plasma and that found in the..." brain/nerve tissue.
> 0400 tinyurl.com/2j7p3t [dfadool@neuro.fsu.edu]
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EAT-less-OFTEN ... MAKE less FAT and/or
WAT STORING beta-cell INSULIN [BCI]
Why do You think that Fadool's 2000 research found that the brain may selectively increase manufacture of more brain/nerve insulin [BNI] at times when pancreatic beta-cell insulin [BCI] manufacture is simultaneously DELIBERATELY reduced ?
And how would an increase in peripheral tissue 'Glucose Insulin Resistance' [GIR aka inflammation] help that DELIBERATE adaption?
CLUE = surface irrigation systems eg still adopted efficiently in Africa.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrigation
> 0195 www.tinyurl.com/2lb5om [jolefsky@ucsd.edu ]
FAST-more-OFTEN ... MAKE more BAT and
BRAIN NERVE INSULIN [BNI]
If the BNI production multiplication factor of increased brain/nerve insulin ... by 72 hours of just drinking water ... can be 15 x 'times' BNI greater [Fadool's 2000 discovery].
What do You speculate may happen to 'brain-POWERing' BNI production with a break-fast/snack/meal at 1 / 3 / 6 / 12 / 18 / 24 / 48 & 96 hours ?
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportionality_(mathematics)
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasting
> 0104 www.tinyurl.com/2mdwdb [jan@metabol.su.se]
> 0104 www.tinyurl.com/37doxu [barbara.cannon@wgi.su.se]
EAT-less-OFTEN ... MAKE better AND better
BRAIN NERVE INSULIN [BNI]
What (?) is the probable significance [in relation to the consequences of 'EAT-less-OFTEN' meal frequency] of Fadool's 2000 BREAKTHROUGH discovery that BNI "levels are low after a meal" ... as regards the POSSIBLE better AND better EFFICIENCY of glucose fuel availability to brain/nerve tissue WHEN depression / dementia / Parkinson's / Alzheimer's [aka type 3 Diabetic] Patients / 'mood-swinging Diabetics' ... DECIDE to repeatedly Sing the song ...
"I-eat-less-OFTEN-I-fast-more-OFTEN"
> 0503 www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
> 1004 www.tinyurl.com/2b99ka [mattsonm@grc.nia.nih.gov]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/yta44e [ giulio.passinetti@mssm.edu]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/2farm9 [temorgan@usc.edu]
And under what circumstances, of meal frequency [and/or NGr], would an adaptive increase in brain/nerve tissue 'Glucose Insulin Resistance' [neural GIR aka neural inflammation] be expected and for what reason ?
> 0382 www.tinyurl.com/2f5say [nancy.rothwell@manchester.ac.uk]
> 1206 www.tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/ynpp4g [raymond.swanson@ucsf.edu ]
> 1007 www.tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org]
REMEMBER THE better AND better EVIDENCE
IS THAT ABOVE-AVERAGE 'BLOOD GLUCOSE'
IS HEALTHIER THAN any ARTIFICIAL LOWERING
PLEASE click on the following 2 web links ASAP and comment ASAP upon your current opinion / preference as to 1 or other of these 2 physiological 'conditions' ...
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoglycemia
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperglycemia
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Plasma blood glucose [PGc] concentrations depend upon the level of water HYDRATION concentration and are measured in either:
1. Milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL), in the United States and other countries (e.g. Japan, France, Egypt, Colombia); or
2. Millimoles per liter (mmol/L), which can be acquired by dividing (mg/dL) by factor of 18.
Scientific journals are moving towards using mmol/L; some journals now use mmol/L as the primary unit but quote also mg/dl.
Comparatively:
* 72 mg/dL = 4 mmol/L
* 90 mg/dL = 5 mmol/L
* 108 mg/dL = 6 mmol/L
* 126 mg/dL = 7 mmol/L
* 144 mg/dL = 8 mmol/L
* 180 mg/dL = 10 mmol/L
* 270 mg/dL = 15 mmol/L
* 288 mg/dL = 16 mmol/L
* 360 mg/dL = 20 mmol/L
* 396 mg/dL = 22 mmol/L
* 594 mg/dL = 33 mmol/L
BETA CELLS SWITCH-OFF AND TURN-ON
Beta Cells continue healthy function even at 30 mmol/l or 540 mg/dL
> 0907 www.tinyurl.com/2vrn55 [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
> 1206 www.tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca ]
> 0907 www.tinyurl.com/2vwnlg [yuvald@ekmd.huji.ac.il]
> 0506 www.tinyurl.com/2542a6 [stephane.dalle@igf.cnrs.fr]
> 0306 www.tinyurl.com/yw3lzz [seino@med.kobe-u.ac.jp ]
In respect of ALL the opinions included within this comment ... please AnyOne ... ALSO ask your current Specialist for advice including the provision of supporting Peer reviewed references evidencing their understanding of this important matter.
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/2vp4e9 [DrBernarr@aol.com]
…Warm thanks & AdrenalinLove; Nick Gracey, BSc(Hons) Medical Biochemistry, Birmingham University, UK, WATerian c/o www.LoveDiabetes.com @ SUN.23.DEC.2007 @ 23:32hrs (C) "I-eat-less-OFTEN-I-fast-more-OFTEN".
Eating less OFTEN is profoundly more healthy than eating less...
> www.tinyurl.com/23akqw [Relative-HYPOglycemia]
> 0400 tinyurl.com/2j7p3t [dfadool@neuro.fsu.edu ]
> 0501 tinyurl.com/yqf8gj [maeda@ys7.u-shizuoka-ken.ac.jp]
> 0503 tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
> 0407 tinyurl.com/29kvda [zangend@hadassah.org.il]
> 1007 tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org]
> www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/12/19/5575.html
> www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/12/03/5558.html
> www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/11/29/5564.html
> www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/11/27/5541.html
> www.HealSelf.org/Diabetes.html [DrBernarr@aol.com]
> www.HealSelf.org/Alzheimer's%20Disease.html
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thyroid
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thymus
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surge_protection
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunny_von_B%C3%BClow
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportionality_(mathematics)
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancreas
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-epileptic_seizure
> www.tinyurl.com/2459gp [Neuro-Glyco-Penia]
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> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leukocytosis
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketosis
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrigation
> www.tinyurl.com/3d72fl [Insulin-like Growth Factor]
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intensive_insulinotherapy
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conventional_insulinotherapy
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulin
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoglycemia
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperglycemia
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HbA1c
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluconeogenesis
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glucagon
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasting
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabetic_hypoglycemia
> www.tinyurl.com/2dm4b9 [Continuous Glucose Monitoring]
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronic_Somogyi_rebound
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certified_diabetes_educator
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerebrospinal_fluid
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-peptide
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89mile_Cou%C3%A9
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-diabetic_drug
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/24nktv [LoveDiabetes.com]
> www.tinyurl.com/3buzxn [Suzanne_DeLaMonte_MD@Brown.edu]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/2k6979 [BetterCell.blogspot.com]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/2vp4e9 [DrBernarr@aol.com ]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/29udcr [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/3x9qh6 [ScienceDaily.com]
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/2u88dx [mattsonm@grc.nia.nih.gov]
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/2nvcqv [brancori@terra.com.br]
> 1007 www.tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org ]
> 1007 www.tinyurl.com/3bcr7h [LoveDiabetes.com]
Beta Cells continue healthy function even at 30 mmol/l or 540 mg/dL
> 0907 www.tinyurl.com/2vrn55 [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
> 0907 www.tinyurl.com/2vwnlg [yuvald@ekmd.huji.ac.il ]
> 0807 www.tinyurl.com/24e67s [Matthew.Sadgrove@duke.edu]
Douglas Kamerow, US editor of BMJ: Is everything you know wrong?
> 0707 www.tinyurl.com/2x3t6l [dkamerow@bmj.com]
> 0607 www.tinyurl.com/2v2pyx [ malcolm@llp.org.uk]
Andrew Farmer: Why monitor PGc of type 2 on oral med?
> 0607 www.tinyurl.com/yuwm8w [andrew.farmer@dphpc.ox.ac.uk ]
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/yog6oe [sm87j@nih.gov]
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/2mffcj [zinman@mshri.on.ca]
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/ynpp4g [raymond.swanson@ucsf.edu]
> www.TheDiabetesBlog.com/2007/04/19/no-food-no-problem
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/29kvda [zangend@hadassah.org.il]
> 0307 www.tinyurl.com/2v3lxs [LoveDiabetes.com]
> 0307 www.tinyurl.com/yqmqnj [Kauffman@hslc.org ]
> 0307 www.tinyurl.com/28lr3g [barbara.cannon@wgi.su.se]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/yta44e [giulio.passinetti@mssm.edu]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/yuh3q8 [mattisonj@mail.nih.gov ]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/378bwo [martin.rutter@coch.nhs.uk]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/2farm9 [temorgan@usc.edu]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/2eyxy3 [john.wahren@ki.se]
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> 1206 www.tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
> 1106 www.tinyurl.com/2bn2g7 [carol.johnston@asu.edu ]
> 1006 www.tinyurl.com/2hnp9h [lmr@dadlnet.dk]
> 0906 www.tinyurl.com/yuqqes [Mark Mayer]
> 0906 www.tinyurl.com/2jh8cj [MayoClinic.com]
> 0506 www.tinyurl.com/2542a6 [stephane.dalle@igf.cnrs.fr]
> 0306 www.tinyurl.com/yw3lzz [seino@med.kobe-u.ac.jp]
> 1204 www.tinyurl.com/2gcjdn [francesca_messina@yahoo.it]
> 1004 www.tinyurl.com/2b99ka [mattsonm@grc.nia.nih.gov]
> 0904 www.tinyurl.com/7ggyq [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
> 0704 www.tinyurl.com/2xx6ps [JML@biostat.bsc.gwu.edu]
> 0104 www.tinyurl.com/2mdwdb [jan@metabol.su.se ]
> 0104 www.tinyurl.com/37doxu [barbara.cannon@wgi.su.se]
> 1203 www.tinyurl.com/39zu9o [Lori A Markham]
> 0903 www.tinyurl.com/2owwsn [skarch@sonic.net]
> 0803 www.tinyurl.com/2tp6vo [efeldman@umich.edu]
> 0503 www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
> 0103 www.tinyurl.com/2arzxs [DiabetesCaseStudy.com]
> 0103 www.tinyurl.com/yszb9q [rortiz1@tulane.edu]
> 0103 www.tinyurl.com/2rh6fz [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
> 0402 www.tinyurl.com/2e8uw7 [joy.dauncey@bbsrc.ac.uk ]
> 0202 www.tinyurl.com/2rhf7p [Robert R. Barefoot]
> 0501 www.tinyurl.com/yqf8gj [ maeda@ys7.u-shizuoka-ken.ac.jp]
> 0400 www.tinyurl.com/2j7p3t [dfadool@neuro.fsu.edu]
http://orthomolecular.org/library/jom/1999/pdf/1999-v14n01-p023.pdf
> 1098 www.tinyurl.com/38cr65 [Turner UKPDS 33]
> 1197 www.tinyurl.com/34lyyj [lobnig@med.uni-duesseldorf.de]
> 0297 www.tinyurl.com/yu77y7 [ m.henricsson@telia.com]
> 0195 www.tinyurl.com/2lb5om [jolefsky@ucsd.edu]
> 0993 www.tinyurl.com/2xbcs8 [DCCT 1993]
> 0491 www.tinyurl.com/2eqls2 [DCCT 1991]
> 1188 www.tinyurl.com/2mcvz8 [DCCT 1988]
> 1287 www.tinyurl.com/2d48d5 [juangrun@mail.med.upenn.edu]
> 0382 www.tinyurl.com/2f5say [nancy.rothwell@manchester.ac.uk]
> 0178 www.tinyurl.com/33q5rt [ndic@info.niddk.nih.gov]
> 0166 'Relative-HYPOglycemia As A Cause Of Neuropsychiatric Illness' @ Journal Of The National Medical Association @ Harry M Salzer MD @ January 1966 @ Vol 58 @ Number 1 @ Table 1 @ Figure 2.
> 0124 "Hyperinsulinism and Dysinsulinism" @ J.A.M.A @ Seale Harris @ 1924 @ Vol 83 @ page 729-733.
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