Guest guest Posted October 26, 2000 Report Share Posted October 26, 2000 , I guess you don't have the time to read many of the posts. We have reported that a test of *healthy young adults* revealed that three-fourths of them were already reacting abnormally (as in spiking bg's). Another study showed 85% of us are born with a " genetic variant " that makes us less tolerant to carbohydrate ingestion. (My question is, of course, why something that all but 15% of us have is called a " genetic variant " . We're not the strange ones ... those who can handle high carb intake are the ones with the " genetic variant " .) There is a high concentration of type 2 diabetes in societies that have a shorter history of agriculture. Many authors conclude that our bodies haven't had the time yet to adopt to high grain intake. We've had agriculture maybe 10,000 years; we find archaeological evidence that our ancestors were skilled hunters of large game animals at least 40,000 years ago, and lived primarily on meat. Our digestive systems - while not as short as true carnivores such as tigers - are quite short ... designed for meat digestion, rather than grains. It is widely reported by those who lower their carb intake that chronic problems such as GERD (gastro-esophageal reflux disease), heartburn, gas, nausea, constipation and diarrhea disappear. It happened to me; it happened to my younger largerly-vegetarian sister, who was a real grain-burner. Her diagnosed disease, for which she was told there was no cure - only ineffectual treatment - vanished when she made subtle shifts in her diet after being diagnosed type 2. It's the point we keep making ... As many as one-half of all diabetics are undiagnosed. Glucose tolerance tests and HbA1c's include undiagnosed diabetics, and are therefore higher than optimum. I'm happy to register under 6.0 - but we should aim for a 5.0 HbA1c. The secret to good control, I feel, is to mimic the bodies of non-diabetics as much as possible. Rather than thinking that it's okay to eat sugar and bread with abandon because postprandial readings of 150-180 are " okay, " we see these glucose spikes as indicative of a disease process that is responsible for much of our modern world's ailments. We diabetics are the canaries in the coalmine. Think of all the associated diseases we report. Are these diseases not widely present among the general population? Don't many of us find an amazing improvement in these allied diseases when we return our bodies to good health by minimizing glucose spikes? , eloquent Bob is correct. We are trying to save you from ill health, just as you believe you are trying to save ours. Susie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 2000 Report Share Posted October 26, 2000 Susie Vicki thought that I should answer the points you made in your Message #19436 of October 25th. Removing the quotations you took from my message and also removing all your usual polemic, I am left with the following points: 1. Non-diabetics do *not* experience postprandial bg spikes. 2. A bg hike indicates carbohydrate intolerance ... it indicates diabetes ... it's a manifestation of a major illness. 3. The difference between diabetics and non-diabetics is that terrible bg rise following ingestion of carbohydrates. It is a reflection of a *major disease process*. I am sure that you won't mind me pointing out that you do not substantiate these claims nor give any clue as to where you got this information (I presume that you read it somewhere). In the same way, most of my stuff is something that I read somewhere. If I have the source information to hand I always give it; however, looking back through months of reading is not justified for a casual exchange of views on an e-mail list. Nevertheless, since this is one of the key points at issue (if everybody - diabetics and non-diabetics alike - really do get post- prandial spikes then the argument for diabetics restricting their intake of carbohydrates is weakened) I decided to sort something out for you. In a German book about healthy living and nutrition (by the nutrition adviser - an MD - to Schumacher, the German champion racing driver) I read the following (don't forget - this is all about healthy people without diabetes): " The Ups and Downs of the Blood Sugar Level " " Between 80 and 100 milligrams of glucose normally swim about in 100 milliliters of blood.: when you eat a bread roll your blood sugar level rises in the next 30 minutes - to 130 milligrams or, if you include a lot of marmalade, to 180 milligrams. The blood sugar level falls during the next 90 minutes to its normal level again or sinks below it. This is because hormones remove the sugar from your blood to store it in your liver, in your muscles or to convert it into fat at your hips. Your hormones will regulate your blood sugar level between 180 and 60 milligrams. Too much sugar in your blood will damage your blood vessels and your nerves, too little sugar will make you tired, shaky and nervous. " There is a graph showing the blood sugar response for a healthy person for five different forms of carbohydrate, starting at 75 mg/dl: - for plain household sugar (the curve peaks at 155 mg/dl after 45 minutes and falls to normal after 120 minutes), - for white bread (the curve peaks at 125 mg/dl after 60 minutes and returns to near-normal after 120 minutes), - for white bread with 5% fiber (the curve peaks at 110 mg/dl after 45 minutes and returns to near-normal after 120 minutes), - for whole-wheat bread (the curve peaks at 105 mg/dl after 40 minutes and returns to near-normal after 90 minutes), and - for raw whole-wheat flakes (not " cornflakes " but the crushed corn grains) (the curve rises only to 90 mg/dl after 40 minutes and goes off the graph still at 90 after 150 minutes). This is obviously not a medical text; the whole purpose of the chapter containing this extract is to persuade healthy non-diabetic people to avoid white bread and eat only whole-wheat bread, the author is an advocate of eating only natural food. But this is why all the physicians, including diabetes specialists, that I have listened to say that a diabetic can safely accept BG rises up to 180 mg/dl regularly - because healthy people can do the same. Your turn now, Susie. Quote me something that substantiates your claim that " non-diabetics do *not* experience postprandial bg spikes " . Between us, we will get to the bottom of this! I am not stuck on this - if you can prove me wrong, I will be happy to be corrected. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 27, 2000 Report Share Posted October 27, 2000 My insurance (Cigna) covers the Incharge strips also. Re: Re: Comments on Susie's #19436 >How do the running costs compare with the usual mass-production meter >and strips? I've got my HMO to cover the strips for the Incharge meter. Currently the Bioscanner 2000 does not have a HBA1C test. I do not test glucose on the Bioscanner, sine the other strips are a lot cheaper. The Bioscanner 2000 does not have someone there 24 hours per day as other meter companies do. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2000 Report Share Posted October 28, 2000 I'm a mutant and proud of it! <g> However, since I do have another auto-immune disorder (Sjogren's, also hypothyroid) and my diabetes was diagnosed after a viral illness,, can't say cause is mystery, as those factors are thought to trigger diabetes. (Another mutant thing about me is the only one in my family to need glasses - which I have required since age 5. My mother, at 96, still doesn't wear 'em.) V. In a message dated 00-10-28 04:43:55 EDT, you write: << > Yabut, ...glad that word " usually " > is there 'cuz I'm type 1 and not only > is it nowhere in my family (I'm a mutant!) It sounds better if you call yourself an ideopathic Type 1 (meaning they are not too sure what the cause is or that it just happens for no apparent reason). >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2000 Report Share Posted October 28, 2000 Did I say hyperthyroid? I meant to say hyPO thyroid, which is just the opposite -- not enough of the durned stuff in my system. Had it for at least 30 years. Thought it was a pretty cool disease to have since once they figured out what the problem was (that took a while) all I had to do was pop a pill every day and have my thyroid function tested yearly. Never thought it would lead to diabetes! (It doesn't, always)...Vicki In a message dated 00-10-28 10:01:17 EDT, you write: << Hi, again, Vicki. Well, well, well. Something else we have in common. I am hyperthyroid, too. I didn't know it was considered an auto immune disease! I must share that info with another computer-less friend who is hypo, also. I sure learn a lot from everyone on this list! I am so glad I found all of you. Sheila {:-D >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2000 Report Share Posted October 28, 2000 Oh, for crying out loud, . Lighten up. The mutant comment was a joke. Re: Comments on Susie's #19436 > Yabut, ...glad that word " usually " > is there 'cuz I'm type 1 and not only > is it nowhere in my family (I'm a mutant!) It sounds better if you call yourself an ideopathic Type 1 (meaning they are not too sure what the cause is or that it just happens for no apparent reason). eGroups Sponsor Public website for Diabetes International: http://www.msteri.com/diabetes-info/diabetes_int Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2000 Report Share Posted October 28, 2000 Hi, again, Vicki. Well, well, well. Something else we have in common. I am hyperthyroid, too. I didn't know it was considered an auto immune disease! I must share that info with another computer-less friend who is hypo, also. I sure learn a lot from everyone on this list! I am so glad I found all of you. Sheila {:-D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2000 Report Share Posted October 28, 2000 Hi, Vicki. No, you said hypo thyroid. I am the one who goofed! I, too, am hypo thyroid! I am glad to know that it doesn't always lead to diabetes. My dad was diagnosed as hypo about 60 years ago! He has never had a " bad " bg. Of course he has never been overweight, either! {:-D Sheila Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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