Today's Issue: Are diabetes drugs mind numbing?
The symptoms of hypoglycemia can be unforgiving - confusion, shakiness, blurry vision. Is it possible that the drugs used to treat diabetes impair our brain? Drugs that do not penetrate the blood-brain barrier (like natural insulin) certainly impair our central nervous system in a number of ways. Drugs used to treat diabetes - like biosynthetic insulins made from E.coli - are not readily available to our central nervous system. Is your diabetes drug of choice mind numbing? Wouldn't you like a choice in the matter?
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- The nervous system is our first line of defense from low blood sugar
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Allie,
Where did you get that information that the sugar in my brain is forty mg% lower than it is in my finger?
NT
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and, assuming that the brain's glucose IS forty mg% lower than my finger's at any one time, why would that make it worrisome? I would suspect that a level of moderate to severe impairment isn't judged at a measure taken from cerebral blood, but from a finger at the time of impairment. So the lesson is that a finger blood sugar is what we need to watch and treat, not a brain blood level.
NT
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RE: NT's statement, "I would suspect that a level of moderate to severe impairment isn't judged at a measure taken from cerebral blood, but from a finger at the time of impairment."
Yes, this is correct. However, regarding whether or not a person will lose consciousness due to Hypoglycemia is dependent on the glucose concentration in Brain Function (from a Medical Perspective).
I had an Endocrinologist who once told me, "that the aggressiveness in wanting a person w/T1DM to maintain a consistent range of Glucose between 80-110mg/dl carries the Risk of "Dead In Bed Syndrome," which she had been witness to. This Fact, resulted in her to change her thinking and suggest to her T1DM Patients who were also Hypoglycemia Unaware maintain a Glucose level of 120-140mg/dl.
This loss of symptoms that is part of Hypoglycemia Unawareness is a Complication resulting from Diabetes Longevity as well as aggressively trying to maintain a low blood sugar level 24/7.
I am also sure that the depletion of C-peptide from our GM Insulin haa resluted in the body being made less aware of low blood sugar as well.
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Can I use that as "My Excuse" Allie!!
I'm sure some Folks think I'm Wacky but it's Part of my Charm*
I've been relatively Lucky over the Years with Only 1 Major Low where I basically didn't Wakeup in the Morning cuz my Sugars were so Low* Scary to say the Least*
I've had several Shaky Sweaty moments which I take Advantage of to Eat a Chocolate Bar + the Good Super Sweet Ones too like ButterFinger or anything Oozing Caramel!!
Me Bad*
1 Piece of Advice i lurned is Alcohol can sometimes LOWER the Blood Sugar - I wasn't Aware o Dat during my Rock n Roll Teen Years altho typically back then yer Drinkin' Rye + Cokes + Rum n Cokes (Yeah the Real SUGAR Coke not the stoopid Diet Faygo Crap fer Diabetics) + those Sweet Girlie Drinks will SkyRocket yer Sugars*
I remember 1 Healthy Phase I was going thru where I wasn't Drinking (stoopid me) + so I Drank a .9 Upper Canada Beer - really Nice but I would get home from the Bars + my Sugars would be thru the Moon! Didn't realize Hops + Barleys + Malts were Glucose Central*
I agree with the Advice Better Cell's Endocrinologist shared that I would rather be a little on the High side*
No Pun intended!!
p.s. NO EggNog Dark Rum Toddy's for the Holidaze fellow Diabetics!!
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Better Cell--
The more things 'change' the more they sometimes seem to stay the same. Your endo, by recommending 120-140, is actually advocating for the OLD standards. Before the DCCT . . . and blood meters . . . and "good control" . . . and "test and test often" became the norm--with recommendations of 80-110--diabetics used to aim for 120-140 when they (infrequently) had bG testing performed. The dangers of low bG, especially when warning signals are absent, range from "driving while impaired" to dead-in-bed.
But, unfortunately, with the insulin cartel dictating insulin availability, and (many) doctors pimping for diabusiness in its many forms, we buy into the status quo. Tight control and good numbers bring accolades; 140 bG averages get us labeled as noncompliant or just not trying hard enough. Maybe we should add an anti-diabetes PILL to supplement our insulin usage? So we play the game and risk not only our own lives, but sometimes the lives of others as we seek to be "model" diabetics with those ever-so-important "good numbers."
If you have an endo who actually demonstrates some common sense--hang onto him or her; you have a rare find.
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Allie, everything you say sounds very ture. I've seen it with my wife. Especially, where the glocumeter is reading just "a little" low and next thing standing is a challenge.
Unfortunately, you're American measurements don't mean anything to me. Do you know where their is a conversion chart online? Or for future videos can you also use Canadian/UK measurements (I believe it's used by the majority of the world).
Keep them coming.
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Hi Seale Harris, Martin Buehler, Harry Salzer, Robert Tanenberg, anonymous, AllieB2, ricklude, Allison Love Beatty, Melody, Brent, Billy Warhol, Scott, BetterCell, Glenn, Jenny, David Beatty, bird54, Ladybird, Nick Trubov, Ron Rosedale, Diana Karaffa, Lissa Coffey, John Manley, Bill Corey, MEC & AnyOne else...
The new proposal is that HYPERglycemia [90 -160 mg/dl] represents above the average [70 - 90 mg/dl] 'fasting blood glucose' [FBG], a 'transient supranormal glycemia' [TSG] level, which if supported [especially with adequate hydration (clean water)], always has a net-beneficial-effect on the body, the purpose of which is to improve the availability of fuel availability to the nervous system [especially the brain] during times of increased need / imminent need ... and is a natural PROTECTIVE mechanism that the body inherently supports by means including 'glucose insulin resistance' [GIR] which also always has a net-beneficial-effect on the body ... as compared with most Scientists current views ... that HYPERglycemia & GIR have a net-negative-effect on the body ...
... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperglycemia
There are many many ways in which GIR fulfills its physiological adaptation ... regulating the cellular entry of GLUCOSE via each cell's individual INSULIN receptor RESISTANCE ... GIR all for helping to regulate nerve/brain fueling [as a priority over any other 'organ' of the body].
More insulin / insulin receptors = less GIR; and
Less insulin / insulin receptors = more GIR ...
bird54 Your 'type 0 & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 diabetes' / 'diabetes-free' Question states: "Is there evidence that un-drug-treated diabetics are less healthy than non-diabetics?
Yes, for type 0 diabetes ... this 'pre-diabetes-diabetes' aka 'IGT' aka 'syndrome X' aka 'reactive hypoglycemia' aka 'idiopathic syndrome' aka 'metabolic syndrome', although first called 'DYSinsulinism' [by Seale Harris in 1924], was better classified as 'relative-HYPOglycemia' [by Martin Buehler in 1962 & Harry Salzer in 1966] ... because ... 'normal' is ALWAYS relative to change. Evidenced by the extraordinary list of symptoms experienced by type 0 Diabetics ... evidenced in this document ...
... '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.
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Yes, for type 1 diabetes where a particular alleged type 1 Diabetic Patient actually has ZERO pancreatic insulin production / recoverable pancreatic insulin production on the day of diagnosis [ie pre-ANYdrugTREATED] ... my reply question to that is ... how often does such a Person EVER appear ?
... http://tinyurl.com/2arzxs [DiabetesCaseStudy.com]
http://tinyurl.com/2l65kn [biol1@telconet.co.zw]
http://tinyurl.com/2gcjdn [francesca_messina@yahoo.it]
http://tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
http://tinyurl.com/2jscjt [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/2734xt [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/2n9m9c [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
No, for type 2 diabetes because well-hydrated UNdrugTREATED type 2 Diabetics have evolved suitably lowered nerve/brain GIR and/or suitably raised pancreatic GIR which results in transient supranormal glycemia [TSG] in response to a western diet and TSG appears to protect against meal induced relative-HYPOglycemia, in an 'exercise-free' manner, more effectively than the diabetes-free response of necessary physical exercise eg a 'post-meal walk' to prevent type 0 Diabetic complications arising.
... http://tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org]
http://tinyurl.com/2gtz93 [sarimari.tupola@helsinki.fi]
Yes, for type 3 diabetes because Alzheimers & Parkinsons Patients [type 3 Diabetics] usually make ZERO changes to their diet ... changes that could relatively easily help prevent & progressively reduce their daily challenges with relative-HYPOglycemia which manifest as symptoms characteristic of cyclical neural/brain fuel starvation and too rapid glucose re-perfusion eg c/o repetitive daily glucose od snacks.
... http://tinyurl.com/ynpp4g [raymond.swanson@ucsf.edu]
Yes, for type 4 diabetes because Pregnant Patients usually make ZERO effective 'relative-HYPOglycemia preventative' changes to their diet ... changes that could relatively easily help prevent & progressively reduce their daily challenges with relative-HYPOglycemia which manifest as HYPERglycemic symptoms characteristic of 'Child protection' against potential cyclical neural/brain fuel starvation of any growing baby and potential too rapid glucose re-perfusion [of the 'sensitive' relatively fast-growing nerve/brain cells] eg c/o repetitive daily glucose over-dose [od] snacks.
... http://tinyurl.com/3ybwq4 [adyer@northwestern.edu]
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bird54 Your 'HYPERglycemia' Question states: "Is there any evidence that hyperglycemia actually causes complications?"
If there is AnyOne who is aware of alleged evidence for above-average 'fasting blood glucose' [FBG] of 90 -160 mg/dl HYPERglycemia causing an other than net-beneficial effect upon the body... please identify the key reference that persuades your mind of that.
2 types of HYPERglycemia include ... (a) Transient Supranormal Glycemia [TSG] where ... when eg a meal leads to an acute DISTRESS-response of excess blood glucose being urinated by the kidneys as a 'calculated' reduction of the glucose concentration to less than approximately 160 - 200 mg/dl; and (b) chronic HYPERglycemia where there is chronic DISTRESS-response eg following a trauma [that persists longer than the time taken to properly digest 'One Meal'].
... http://tinyurl.com/3yuhzg [brancori@terra.com.br]
bird54 Your other 'HYPERglycemia' Question states: If hyperglycemia is the cure to hypoglycemia, does there need to be a cure for hyperglycemia?
In my opinion the HYPERglycemia [in the presence of adequate hydration] is always protective as long as it is allowed to reduce blood glucose naturally back to below 160 -200 mg/dl by removing the DISTRESS and/or eating less OFTEN.
PLEASE AnyOne "type 2 Diabetic" really do this ... have each & every One of your Doctors identify ANY Peer-reviewed scientific reference, with an UNdrugTREATED control [ie comparing a Diabetic Group entirely UNdrugTREATED], ever been produced, that has ever evidenced that type 2 Diabetics are less healthy UNdrugTREATED ?"
... http://tinyurl.com/2d48d5 [juangrun@mail.med.upenn.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/3xdso9 [evakohner@gmail.com]
http://tinyurl.com/34lyyj [lobnig@med.uni-duesseldorf.de]
http://tinyurl.com/2tsuum [zinman@mshri.on.ca]
http://tinyurl.com/2ozw5s [rury.holman@dtu.ox.ac.uk]
http://tinyurl.com/yo9eq3 [ukpds@dtu.ox.ac.uk]
http://tinyurl.com/2wrk2q [rury.holman@dtu.ox.ac.uk]
http://tinyurl.com/2xwyaw [webmaster@servier.com]
http://tinyurl.com/298jat [jonathan.levy@drl.ox.ac.uk]
http://tinyurl.com/3x45zf [kav4@cdc.gov]
http://tinyurl.com/yk8dvf [dnathan@partners.org]
http://tinyurl.com/2ve6pv [pcryer@wustl.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/35sfwq [dnathan@partners.org]
http://tinyurl.com/ywnrs6 [diabetescare@diabetes.org]
http://tinyurl.com/2tbry7 [dnathan@partners.org]
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bird54 Your 'type 0' Question states: "If you were to list the types of diabetes on a spectrum, what order would you put them and what would come BEFORE type 0 diabetes?"
Relative-HYPOglycemia [aka nerve/brain fuel starvation DISTRESS] without 'eating less OFTEN & drinking more clean WATER' becomes ...
Type 0 diabetes pancreatic GIR adapted to type 1 diabetes to survive acute Relative-HYPOglycemia short term.
Type 0 diabetes pancreatic GIR adapted to type 2 diabetes to survive chronic Relative-HYPOglycemia long term.
Type 0 diabetes nerve/brain GIR adapted to type 3 diabetes to survive chronic Relative-HYPOglycemia short term.
Type 0 diabetes pancreatic GIR adapted to type 4 diabetes to survive acute Relative-HYPOglycemia pregnancy/gestation term.
What comes BEFORE type 0 diabetes is a well-hydrated UNdrugTREATED lifestyle, including adaptable stresses that increasingly strengthen the Human body with the help of adequate nourishment and 'digestion-time' between each meal.
Diabetes is NOT a disease … diabetes is the CURE [for relative-HYPOglycemia].
1. Please comment upon: Debra Fadool's 2000 paper in relation to increasing nerve/brain GIR and preventing relative-HYPOglycemia.
... http://tinyurl.com/2j7p3t [dfadool@neuro.fsu.edu]
2. Please comment upon: Toshio Maeda's 2001 paper in relation to increasing pancreatic GIR and preventing relative-HYPOglycemia.
... http://tinyurl.com/yqf8gj [maeda@ys7.u-shizuoka-ken.ac.jp]
3. Please comment upon: Michael Anson's 2003 paper in relation to increasing pancreatic GIR, reducing nerve/brain GIR and preventing / CURING relative-HYPOglycemia, Alzheimers & Parkinsons.
... http://tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
4. Please comment upon: Michael Ristow's 2007 "Glucose Restriction..."[aka 'Glucose Insulin Resistance' ("GIR")] paper in relation to Fadool's, Maeda's & Anson's papers and eating less OFTEN for increasing pancreatic GIR, reducing nerve/brain GIR and preventing / CURING relative-HYPOglycemia, Alzheimers & Parkinsons.
... http://tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org]
How much clearer?
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To better understand how profound relative-HYPOglycemia can be ... consider "relative-HYPOthermia" and feelings of 'peripheral neuropathy' ... eg in the summer suddenly being actually too cold [cf relative-HYPOglycemia @ 125 mg/dl HYPERglycemia] by going for a swim too suddenly after sun-bathing ... body had happily adapted to sun-bathing HYPERthermia [cf transient supranormal glycemia @ 150 mg/dl] but on jumping into a sea ... perceives that the water is actually now relatively too cold even though the sea temperature is absolutely 'quite warm' [ie 125 mg/dl HYPERglycemia whilst 'above-average', is in the particular adaptation circumstances actually CAUSING 'nerve/brain-numbing / glucose-starving' relative-HYPOglycemia] ... probably followed by an inflammatory 'glucose re-perfusion' neuropathic snack to psychologically help warm-up from the alleged cold swim.
... http://tinyurl.com/ynpp4g [raymond.swanson@ucsf.edu]
Please AnyOne ALSO ask your current Specialist for advice including the provision of supporting Peer reviewed references evidencing their understanding of this important matter.
... http://tinyurl.com/2vp4e9 [DrBernarr@aol.com]
…Warm thanks; Nick Gracey, BSc(Hons) Medical Biochemistry, Birmingham University, UK, WATerian c/o www.DiabetesHealth.com @ 19:14hrs MON.10.DEC.2007.
Continued ... [REFERENCES]
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Continued ... [REFERENCES]
www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/12/03/5558.html
http://HealSelf.org/Diabetes.html [DrBernarr@aol.com]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperglycemia
'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.
http://tinyurl.com/2arzxs [DiabetesCaseStudy.com]
http://tinyurl.com/2l65kn [biol1@telconet.co.zw]
http://tinyurl.com/2gcjdn [francesca_messina@yahoo.it]
http://tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
http://tinyurl.com/2jscjt [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/2734xt [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/2n9m9c [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/3aypqg">http://tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org]
http://tinyurl.com/2gtz93 [sarimari.tupola@helsinki.fi]
http://tinyurl.com/ynpp4g">http://tinyurl.com/ynpp4g [raymond.swanson@ucsf.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/3ybwq4 [adyer@northwestern.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/3yuhzg [brancori@terra.com.br]
http://tinyurl.com/2d48d5 [juangrun@mail.med.upenn.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/3xdso9 [evakohner@gmail.com]
http://tinyurl.com/34lyyj [lobnig@med.uni-duesseldorf.de]
http://tinyurl.com/2tsuum [zinman@mshri.on.ca]
http://tinyurl.com/2ozw5s [rury.holman@dtu.ox.ac.uk]
http://tinyurl.com/yo9eq3 [ukpds@dtu.ox.ac.uk]
http://tinyurl.com/2wrk2q [rury.holman@dtu.ox.ac.uk]
http://tinyurl.com/2xwyaw [webmaster@servier.com]
http://tinyurl.com/298jat [jonathan.levy@drl.ox.ac.uk]
http://tinyurl.com/3x45zf [kav4@cdc.gov]
http://tinyurl.com/yk8dvf [dnathan@partners.org]
http://tinyurl.com/2ve6pv [pcryer@wustl.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/35sfwq [dnathan@partners.org]
http://tinyurl.com/ywnrs6 [diabetescare@diabetes.org]
http://tinyurl.com/2tbry7 [dnathan@partners.org]
http://tinyurl.com/2j7p3t [dfadool@neuro.fsu.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/yqf8gj [maeda@ys7.u-shizuoka-ken.ac.jp]
http://tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/3aypqg">http://tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org]
http://tinyurl.com/ynpp4g">http://tinyurl.com/ynpp4g [raymond.swanson@ucsf.edu]
http://tinyurl.com/2vp4e9 [DrBernarr@aol.com]
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Hi Allie,
Thank you for bringing this to US. I have had Type 1 Diabetes for 31 years...I will be 41 next month. Hypo's are getting worse as I get older. Like you I have disliked them since I was a child and as time goes on they take me all day to feel better (once I have had one). I am so disenchanted with the medical system and trying to find help to feel better so that I can have a better quality of life with my husband and 10 month old son...I want to be around for him! I am excited my husband, John has found you and look forward to hearing what you have to say--I believe you are giving me the courage to stand up for ME and my health care! Thanks!
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The 'self-care' song CURE for ALL Diabetics ...
"I-eat-less-OFTEN-
I-fast-more-OFTEN"
Posted by bird54 on 18 December 2007
> www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/11/29/5564.html
bird54 says...
"Hi Nick (and anyone else),
What do you think of the science daily article -- http://www.sciencedaily.com:80/releases/2007/12/071217150506.htm -- scientists nix low carb diets? They say that ketogenic diets are harmful, yet the research linked in Nick's previous comments on fasting show that ketogenic diets protect the brain. Why the discrepancy?
> 1207 tinyurl.com/3x9qh6 [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
> 1207 tinyurl.com/29udcr [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
> 0904 tinyurl.com/7ggyq [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
Hi bird54 & AnyOne else...
Carol Johnston found a higher percentage of calcium in the urine which may be associated with the beneficial effects of ketogenic diets and their possible reduction of calcification of tissues associated with aging disease. Calcium homeostasis is far more important than the 'bone issue' focussed upon by the science daily article.
> 1006 tinyurl.com/2hnp9h [lmr@dadlnet.dk]
> 0906 tinyurl.com/yuqqes [Mark Mayer]
> 0202 tinyurl.com/2rhf7p [Robert R. Barefoot]
The upside of a low carbohydrate intake, especially sub15%, is that Dieters usually go into what's called ketosis, or the increased efficiency of the body to oxidize fat aka 'white adipose tissue'.
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketosis
> 1106 tinyurl.com/2bn2g7 [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
> 1203 tinyurl.com/39zu9o [Lori A Markham]
> 0503 tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
Carol also found the ketogenic diets were capable of raising cholesterol levels which is associated with substantially improved cardiovascular health.
> 0607 tinyurl.com/2v2pyx [malcolm@llp.org.uk]
ONE MEAL A DAY
By repeatedly singing the 'self-care' song ... "I-eat-less-OFTEN-I-fast-more-OFTEN" it is possible to train the subconscious to enjoy 1 meal a day [or less] and train the body's metabolism to enter into ketosis increasingly quickly. By fuelling the body increasingly on ketones the LIVER can better focus upon gluconeogenesis for supplying an efficient flow of glucose to the brain during especially during times of stress & distress.
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluconeogenesis
Ketogenic diets, like 1 meal a day, can help avoid the severity of a Person getting a blood glucose "number down" too quickly ... which is very beneficial ... because ... since JAN.1966 [and before] it has been proven that relative-HYPOglycemia can result in the following neuro-psychiatric symptoms as the body is distressed into 'corrective' methods of preventing nerve/brain tissue from switching-off ...
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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.
MORE EVIDENCE...
' ... 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....'
Evidence suggests that being ANYdrugTREATED to quickly reduce blood plasma glucose concentration [PGC], has negative effects upon [brain/nerve] cerebro-spinal glucose concentration [CGC] ... comparable to giving a deep sea Diver 'the bends' by too physiologically-quick 'an ascent' ... 'the glycemic bends', too physiologically-quick 'a descent', can have very negative effects upon Diabetics ...
> 1203 tinyurl.com/39zu9o [Lori A Markham]
> 0704 tinyurl.com/2xx6ps [JML@biostat.bsc.gwu.edu]
> 0993 tinyurl.com/2xbcs8 [DCCT 1993]
> 0178 tinyurl.com/33q5rt [ndic@info.niddk.nih.gov]
'... 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 tinyurl.com/2d48d5 [juangrun@mail.med.upenn.edu]
> 1097 tinyurl.com/34lyyj [lobnig@med.uni-duesseldorf.de]
'... 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 [FPG] 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 FPG less than 6 mmol/L. In the conventional group, the aim was the best achievable FPG with diet alone; HYPOglycemic drugs were added, to rapidly reduce FPG to 6 mmol/L, only if there were HYPERglycemic symptoms [eg thirst] OR fasting plasma glucose greater than 15 mmol/L...'
> 1098 tinyurl.com/38cr65 [Turner UKPDS 33]
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-diabetic_drug
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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
EAT-LESS-OFTEN ... MAKE MORE
BRAIN NERVE INSULIN [BNI]
Why do You think that Fadool found that the brain may selectively increase manufacture of more brain/nerve insulin [BNI] at times when pancreatic beta-cell insulin [PBI] manufacture is simultaneously reduced ?
And would an increase in peripheral tissue 'Glucose Insulin Resistance' [GIR aka inflammation] help or hinder that adaption?
... [CLUE = surface irrigation systems eg still adopted efficiently in Africa]
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrigation
EAT TOO OFTEN TURN-OFF
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 discovery].
... What do You speculate BNI production may be with a snack/meal at 1 / 3 / 6 / 12 / 24 / 48 & 96 hours ?
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportionality_(mathematics)
MEALS TURN-OFF
BRAIN NERVE INSULIN [BNI]
What is the probable significance [in relation to the consequences of meal frequency] of Fadool's discovery that BNI "levels are low after a meal" as regards the increased EFFICIENCY of glucose fuel availability to brain/nerve tissue of depression / dementia / Alzheimer's [aka type 3 Diabetic] Patients / 'mood-swinging Diabetics' ... who eat less OFTEN ?
And under what circumstances would an adaptive increase in brain/nerve tissue 'Glucose Insulin Resistance' [GIR aka inflammation] be expected and for what reason ?
> 0407 tinyurl.com/ynpp4g [raymond.swanson@ucsf.edu]
> 1007 tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org]
REMEMBER THE ONLY REAL EVIDENCE
IS THAT ABOVE AVERAGE 'BLOOD GLUCOSE'
IS HEALTHIER THAN any ARTIFICIAL LOWERING
UNdrugTREATED type 2 Diabetics and other healthy People should test daily with ChemStrips and pause from eating, and drink just water, until their urine is glucose free. The less carbohydrate eaten ... the less time between meals.
That is how to CURE type 2 diabetes and prevent all 'newly diagnosed' type 1 & type 2 diabetes.
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 tinyurl.com/2vp4e9 [DrBernarr@aol.com]
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…Warm thanks; Nick Gracey, BSc(Hons) Medical Biochemistry, Birmingham University, UK, WATerian c/o www.LoveDiabetes.com @ FRI.21.DEC.2007 @ 23:59hrs (C) "I-eat-less-OFTEN-I-fast-more-OFTEN".
Eating less OFTEN is profoundly more healthy than eating less...
> 0400 www.tinyurl.com/2j7p3t [dfadool@neuro.fsu.edu]
> 0501 www.tinyurl.com/yqf8gj [maeda@ys7.u-shizuoka-ken.ac.jp]
> 0503 www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk">www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/29kvda [zangend@hadassah.org.il]
> 1007 www.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]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/3x9qh6 [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/29udcr [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketosis
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluconeogenesis
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-diabetic_drug
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/282st8 [DrBernarr@aol.com]
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-peptide
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-diabetic_drug
> 1207 tinyurl.com/3bcr7h [LoveDiabetes.com]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/24nktv [LoveDiabetes.com]
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrigation
> 1207 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportionality_(mathematics)
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/2vp4e9 [DrBernarr@aol.com]
> 0607 www.tinyurl.com/2v2pyx [malcolm@llp.org.uk]
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/ynpp4g [raymond.swanson@ucsf.edu ]
> 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]
> 0904 www.tinyurl.com/7ggyq [carol.johnston@asu.edu]
> 0704 www.tinyurl.com/2xx6ps [JML@biostat.bsc.gwu.edu]
> 1203 www.tinyurl.com/39zu9o [Lori A Markham]
> 0903 www.tinyurl.com/2owwsn [skarch@sonic.net]
> 0503 www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk">www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
> 0103 www.tinyurl.com/2arzxs [DiabetesCaseStudy.com]
> 0202 www.tinyurl.com/2rhf7p [Robert R. Barefoot]
> 1098 www.tinyurl.com/38cr65 [Turner UKPDS 33]
> 1197 www.tinyurl.com/34lyyj [lobnig@med.uni-duesseldorf.de]
> 0993 www.tinyurl.com/2xbcs8 [DCCT 1993]
> 1287 www.tinyurl.com/2d48d5 [juangrun@mail.med.upenn.edu]
> 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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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*
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."
Bottom Line is they are making tremendous Headway right down to the Building Block Cell Level + I don't care whether it Embryonic Stem Cells (currently being tossed in the Garbage due to Bush + his Brainwashed Flock of Religious Idiots) but Hopefully Scientists will be able to Freely pursue Research without unnecessary Roadblocks being placed in front of them*
Thanks Again Nicholas for Sharing this Info with us!
Peace*
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Quotation by Herbert M Shelton on December 1978
"...Food and nutrition are NOT synonymous. You are not nourished by the food that you eat, but in proportion to the amount you DIGEST and ASSIMILATE..."
One meal a day, appropriately structured, can help shed fat and/or build muscle depending upon associated exercise [eg aerobic/anaerobic] and/or nutrition [eg carb %].
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/2u88dx [mattsonm@grc.nia.nih.gov]
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcopenia
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coeliac_disease
> www.HealSelf.org/Colitis.html
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 ... CURE!!
"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 ... The results were dramatic ... The islet inflammation cleared up and the diabetes was gone ... 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* ...'
Posted by bird54 on 29 December 2007
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/28zphn [LoveDiabetes.com]
'... Nick, you are a tremendous resource to me with all your links. For the past 2 years I have been reading every book I could find about diabetes, in addition to searching the web for information, but I have learned more in a short time from reading your comments than anything else ... My teenage son has Coeliac disease and multiple food allergies. I think he has adrenal fatigue/exhaustion too, because he cannot handle any amount of stress. He is on a very restricted diet, takes digestive enzymes, but still has bloating after meals. While I fast daily to lose weight and control my type 2 diabetes, I would not put him on a fast for fear that he will shrivel up and blow away. He is already extremely underweight and I cannot risk him losing any more.
I really sympathize with type 1 diabetics who have to inject insulin just to stay alive. I have a hard enough time controlling my type 2 diabetes with diet and exercise. The shocker for me was that I got diabetes even though it does NOT run in my family (although I suspect my grandmother may have had gestational diabetes because of her large babies).
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I always exercised and ate right, and yet I got diabetes anyway. For no known reason, I just started gaining weight and then one day I had diabetes. Low carb dieting and exercise does not take off the pounds. It just maintains my weight. However, fasting puts me into mild ketosis and then I lose weight. Being a former champion gymnast, it disgusts me to look in the mirror and not see the lean, muscular body I once possessed. It is not easy for anyone to live with diabetes...'
'...It is clear to me that "inflammation" is the cause of all diseases, including diabetes. It seems that food intolerances/allergies may be the culprit that causes inflammation. Avoiding the trigger foods (gluten, casein, eggs, nuts, soy, etc.) can reduce inflammation. Fasting also helps because it means less exposure to the trigger foods, plus giving the body time to detox. So I think that Nick is on to something here...'
'...Before I developed type 2 diabetes, I had a period of several years where my weight started to creep up. I went on Atkin's and lost weight. People kept telling me, "Don't go on Atkin's or you will have a heart attack!" So I took the advice of people who convinced me that I needed more "whole grains". I started eating whole wheat bread, and guess what? Within 3 months I had diabetes. Recently, I went to an allergy specialist who told me that I am allergic to milk and wheat. I wonder if the reason these grainless, low carb diets work is because many people are sensitive to gluten...'
Hi bird54, BillyWarhol, BetterCell, Brent & AnyOne else...
Eating less OFTEN and digesting more OFTEN can de-congest the liver, reduce auto-immune disease, reduce brain/nerve glucose insulin resistance [bnGIR], increase peripheral tissue glucose insulin resistance [ptGIR] and CURE diabetes.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver
The main avoidable CAUSE of diabetes and way to CURE diabetes is set out in the comments & associated links above and in a more concentrated format as follows...
Eating less OFTEN cures type 2 diabetes and eating less OFTEN, even more OFTEN, cures type 1 diabetes.
Lithell's 1983 chronic inflammation reference relates to the fasting referred to by your comment BUT that type of fasting / aka digestion is without any mention of the word "OFTEN" and therefore lacks the SUSTAINABILITY of 'better digestion associated benefits' of eating less OFTEN aka intermittent eating / intermittent fasting.
> 0183 www.tinyurl.com/329umr [hans.lithell@pubcare.uu.se]
INTERMITTENT EATING
The difference between eating / fasting vs intermittent eating & intermittent fasting is that the results of an intermittent system are sustainable. EG sustainable to achieve relief from inflammation and/or sustainable to the stage of a complete CURE. Its a matter of time & effort ... like training to be a champion gymnast or intermittent exercising ... every day better in every way ... in order to make SUSTAINABLE progress.
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Coeliac disease needs an intermittent eating & intermittent exercising system that ... every day better in every way ... reduces excess inflammation and builds increased muscle mass. A fast way [in my opinion] to achieve that is ... one meal a day [or less] of EXCLUSIVELY "fresh organic raw liquidiet nutrition" of minimally allergenic juicy water-rich foods [EG fruits / vegetables / raw egg yolks]. Modern technology makes this possible & sustainable. Vast quantities can be enjoyably 'eaten' within 15 minutes ... followed 23 HOURS 45 MINUTES OR MORE of thinking, planning, exercising, digestion & assimilation BEFORE eating again. Consuming 'solid food' in the presence of Coeliac inflammatory disease, on the delicate digestive tissue linings, is out-of-order if there is a healthier alternative.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coeliac_disease
> 1206 www.tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juice_fasting
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflammation
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyme_disease
To properly digest & assimilate 1 meal a day various hormones need to be stimulated in the body that will encourage nerve & muscle growth and create an 'assimilation-hunger' within your Son / his tissues.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcopenia">www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcopenia
In my opinion the world leader in EFFICIENTLY building maximum muscle mass, whilst eating the minimum amount of [inflammation producing] food, is Pete Sisco.
> www.GetThisStrong.com [support@superrepequipment.com]
> www.HealSelf.org/Strong-Become%20Stronger.html [Dr Bernarr]
> www.MatthewFurey.com [zen]
> www.MattFurey.com [conditioning]
Sustainable weight control is about understanding HOW to shed fat or build muscle. You & your Son should understand what Pete Sisco, Dr Bernarr & Matt Furey are teaching about becoming stronger.
INTERMITTENT EXERCISING
If your Son & Yourself can do a wall-facing-handstand [toes supported by the wall] for more than 5 seconds You can both substantially & sustainably increase muscle mass, every day better in every way, by increasing your record hold-time for holding that 'isometric gymnastic posture' by 5 seconds extra EVERY day.
Please comment on your & your Son's current record posture hold-time and record it daily on a wall somewhere and watch the daily improvement. [You should also measure your pH at least once daily].
Anecdotally a number of tv documentaries feature tribes etc who sustain Themselves with the benefit of 1 meal a day [or less]. The muscle tone and anatomy of the Men, Women & Children is usually extra-ordinarily healthy.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcopenia">www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcopenia
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ALTERNATIVES & CHOICES
Certain diets/mediations owe their 'weight-loss' associations to increased inflammation. You need learn from Pete Sisco how little food is needed to become stronger [eg when growth hormone is sustainably stimulated] and to be courageous for your Son and ASAP secure the support of licensed medical Practitioner who is fit & strong and clearly understands the benefits of ... fresh organic raw liquidiet nutrition ... to digestion, assimilation & 'body-building'; AND please discuss the following intermittent eating / fasting protocol as suitable for both Yourself [low carb] & your Son [high carb] ... reading between the lines in so far as your Son is diabetes/medication free? Details of the Practitioner's feedback / alternative strategy would be most appreciated...
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growth_hormone
WATer CURES INFLAMMATION…
(A) Maintain maximum comfortable hydration [drinking / naso-gastic] and minimum [50-75% reduction] basal insulin [eg type 1 exogenous / type 2 endogenous] to prevent ketoacidosis [pH > 7.1] ie the hourly target is pH control in the range 7.2 - 7.5 and plasma blood glucose concentration STRICTLY above 150 mg/dL (9 mmol/L) and below approximately 350 mg/dL (19 mmol/L) which should encourage Diabetic glucose urination of excess plasma glucose concentrations and simultaneously minimize/prevent any possibility of relative-HYPOglycemia [the apparent CAUSE of 'compensatory-HYPERglycemia' / aka diabetes].
> 0108 www.tinyurl.com/39dbyo [rosenal@peds.ufl.edu]
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/29kvda">www.tinyurl.com/29kvda [zangend@hadassah.org.il]
> 0100 www.tinyurl.com/ypozqv [rosenal@peds.ufl.edu]
Cerebral cGc is approx 40mg/dL less than Plasma pGc concentration
> 1203 www.tinyurl.com/39zu9o [Lori A Markham]
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Optimal_Diet
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PH
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acidosis
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabulimia
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabetic_ketoacidosis
ONE SUB15 min MEAL EVERY DAY
(
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/2u88dx [mattsonm@grc.nia.nih.gov]
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/29kvda">www.tinyurl.com/29kvda [zangend@hadassah.org.il]
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> 0501 www.tinyurl.com/yqf8gj">www.tinyurl.com/yqf8gj [maeda@ys7.u-shizuoka-ken.ac.jp]
Beta-cells can be healthy even at 30 mmol/l or 540 mg/dL [pH > 7.1]
> 0907 www.tinyurl.com/2vrn55 [pbutler@mednet.ucla.edu]
TYPE 1 BECOMES TYPE 2 BECOMES TYPE 0
(C) Await daily recovery [to relatively lower plasma glucose concentrations], every day better in every way, sustainable, in respect of your increased reduction of relative-HYPOglycemia ie increasingly efficient reduction of the CAUSE [of 'compensatory-HYPERglycemia'] … increasingly efficiently facilitates the gradual recovery your beta-cells & brain/nerve insulin sensitivity … ie gradually towards the total sustainable cure [days/weeks/months for type 1a & type 1.5 … or … hours/days/weeks for type 1b & type 2]. Type 1 CURE by increasing peripheral tissue glucose insulin resistance [ptGIR] ie by transiently acquiring the protective characteristics of a type 2 Diabetic and/or a type 0 [aka pre-Diabetic] and/or type 4 [aka pregnant Diabetic] wherein that ptGIR helps route fuel to to the brain ... gradually eradicating issues of relative-HYPOglycemia EG as recently experienced by BetterCell. Increased peripheral tissue glucose insulin resistance [ptGIR] provides more reliable brain/nerve glucose 'fuel efficiency' at lower plasma glucose concentrations [PGc].
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/2k6979 [BetterCell.blogspot.com]
www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/11/02/5548.html">www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/11/02/5548.html
> 1007 tinyurl.com/3aypqg [mristow@mristow.org]
> Somogyi, M, Kirstein, M: Insulin as a cause of extreme hyperglycemia and instability. Week Bull St Louis M Soc 32: 498, 1938.
> 0503 www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk">www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
In respect of ALL the opinions included within & associated with 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 @ SAT.29.DEC.2007 @ 23:37hrs (C) "I-Fast-23hours-45minutes-EveryDay-OrMore".
Eating less OFTEN is profoundly more healthy than eating less...
> 0400 www.tinyurl.com/2j7p3t [dfadool@neuro.fsu.edu]
> 0501 www.tinyurl.com/yqf8gj">www.tinyurl.com/yqf8gj [maeda@ys7.u-shizuoka-ken.ac.jp]
> 0503 www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk">www.tinyurl.com/ys63gk [anson@jhu.edu]
> 0407 www.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.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/11/02/5548.html">www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/11/02/5548.html
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> 0108 www.tinyurl.com/39dbyo [rosenal@peds.ufl.edu]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/2k6979 [BetterCell.blogspot.com]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/27pwj8 [saskiananette@hotmail.com]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/3au3a5 [LoveDiabetes.com]
> 1207 www.tinyurl.com/2v9ajm [LoveDiabetes.com]
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/2u88dx [mattsonm@grc.nia.nih.gov]
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/yrr5kd [LoveDiabetes.com]
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/2gxkqt [Mercola.com]
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/ytm65u [carolyn_susma@bpost.com]
> 1107 www.tinyurl.com/37fh3g [ConditioningResearch.blogspot.com]
> 1007 www.tinyurl.com/35mnkk [Ian Clark]
Beta-cells continue healthy function even at 30 mmol/l or 540 mg/dL
> 0907 www.tinyurl.com/2vrn55 [pbutler@mednet.ucla.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]
http://www.TheDiabetesBlog.com/2007/04/19/no-food-no-problem
> 0407 www.tinyurl.com/29kvda [zangend@hadassah.org.il]
www.DiabetesHealth.com/read/2007/04/11/5113.html
http://www.TheDiabetesBlog.com/2007/04/03/the-honeymoon-period
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/2uj9q7 [Bob@BobRanson.net]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/2eyxy3 [john.wahren@ki.se]
> 0107 www.tinyurl.com/2farm9 [temorgan@usc.edu]
> 1206 www.tinyurl.com/y7znor [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
> 0806 www.tinyurl.com/23x2nv [vbhatia@sgpgi.ac.in]
> 0103 www.tinyurl.com/2rh6fz [hmdosch@sickkids.ca]
> 0802 www.tinyurl.com/2qxuzh [Fortunato.Lombardo@unime.it]
> 0101 www.tinyurl.com/2r293z [nsglaser@ucdavis.edu]
> 0100 www.tinyurl.com/ypozqv [rosenal@peds.ufl.edu]
> 0597 www.tinyurl.com/yr8b95 [Katrina Leskanich]
> 0183 www.tinyurl.com/329umr [hans.lithell@pubcare.uu.se]
> Rosenbloom, AL, Giordano, BP: Chronic over-treatment with insulin in children and adolescents. Am J Dis Child 131: 881-885, 1977.
> 0367 www.tinyurl.com/2uxb99 [Dr Allan Cott]
> Somogyi, M: Exacerbation of diabetes by excess insulin action. Am J Med, 26: 169-191, 1959.
> Somogyi, M, Kirstein, M: Insulin as a cause of extreme hyperglycemia and instability. Week Bull St Louis M Soc 32: 498, 1938.
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Optimal_Diet
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coeliac_disease
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juice_fasting
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflammation
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyme_disease
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PH
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acidosis
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabulimia
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabetic_ketoacidosis
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcopenia
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growth_hormone
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Somogyi
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Somogyi_rebound.GIF
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schizophrenia
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parkinson%27s_disease
> www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leukocytosis
> www.HealSelf.org/Alzheimer's%20Disease.html
> www.HealSelf.org/Diabetes.html [DrBernarr@aol.com]
Eating less OFTEN can CURE any diabetes
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Great article.
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Relative-HYPOglycemia-Distress = DIABETES ? ...HOW ?
video >
www.NicholasDynesGracey.blogspot.cOM/2008/03/relative-hypoglycemia-distressdiabetes.html
< video
Relative-HYPOglycemia-Distress "RHOD" causes DIABETES ? ...WHY ?
www.Relative-HYPOglycemia.cOM
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…Warm thanks & Adrenalin Love
Nick Gracey, BSc(Hons) Medical Biochemistry, Birmingham University, UK, WATerian (C) MON.10.MAR.2008 @ 11:50hrs c/o www.LoveDiabetes.cOM & www.HYPO-thesis.cOM
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AdrenaLINE... www.1MealPerDay.cOM ... "Lovingly-I-Fast-Every-23hrs-45mins-OrMore"
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DISTRESS causes HYPOglycemia RELATIVE to the Relative NORMOglycemia before that DISTRESS ? ...HOW ?
video >
www.NicholasDynesGracey.blogspot.cOM/2008/03/distress-causes-hypoglycemia-relative.html
< video
Relative HYPOglycemia persists if ... 'HYPOglycemia effectors' such as DISTRESS persists and/or HYPOglycemia FOOD administration persists and/or HYPOglycemia DRUG administration persists ... each/any 'HYPOglycemia effector' persisting ... irrespective of the INITIAL onset of HYPOglycemia relative to a previous Relative NORMOglycemia ... for any particular Individual at that particular time of their LIFE. Such a physiological state may reasonably be referred to as:-
Relative-HYPOglycemia-Distress "RHOD" ? ...WHY ?
www.DiabetesHealth.cOM/read/1995/05/01/350.html
www.TheDiabetesBlog.cOM/2007/05/25/tv-causes-elevated-glucose-in-children
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…Warm thanks & Adrenalin Love
Nick Gracey, BSc(Hons) Medical Biochemistry, Birmingham University, UK, WATerian (C) TUE.11.MAR.2008 @ 11:14hrs c/o www.LoveDiabetes.cOM & www.HYPO-thesis.cOM
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AdrenaLINE... www.1MealPerDay.cOM ... "Lovingly-I-Fast-Every-23hrs-45mins-OrMore"
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They could be. I don't know much in the medicine domain, but I've also heard that it has certain effects like the ones you enumerated.
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Yeah Where did you get that information
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Lots of interesting videos
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