Guest guest Posted January 19, 2001 Report Share Posted January 19, 2001 Hi Rita The alcoholism=diabetes thing really does makes no sense. As you wrtie, most diabetes is acquried where the disease ppl claim alcoholism is inherited. Ironically the analogy might be closer in that most alcoholism is acquired! P. > > > It used to totally piss me off in treatment whenever the imbecile counselors used to say " Alcoholism is a disease very similar to diabetes " -- I have lost several family members to complications from diabetes and it is a REAL disease, absolutely nothing like problem drinking! (Diabetes is not caused by eating too much sugar, and blood sugar levels in diabetics can fluctuate tremendously, with damaging results, regardless of avoiding sugar and following diet and medication protocols. OTOH blood alcohol levels cannot ever rise above zero, or near-zero, without the individual ingesting alcohol!) > > Anyway, for anyone interested, here is a brief summary of the latest research discovery on diabetes, with a link to a longer version at the bottom. When and if scientists ever find a hormone or other biological marker that makes blood alcohol levels rise without the conscious participation of the patient, maybe I'll start considering the " alcoholism is a disease " idea. > > ~Rita > > *** Hormone may be key to diabetes > > (AP) - Scientists have discovered a hormone that may explain the link between diabetes and obesity - a tantalizing finding that could someday lead to new treatments for the disease. The hormone, dubbed resistin, is produced by fat cells and prompts tissues to resist insulin, the substance the body needs to process blood sugar, researchers said. Diabetics produce too little insulin or cannot use it efficiently. Obesity is one of the biggest risk factors for Type II, or adult-onset, diabetes. The adult-onset form of the disease accounts for more than 90% of all cases of diabetes. The University of Pennsylvania scientists identified resistin in mice and found genetic evidence that the same hormone exists in humans, though they have yet to isolate it. Mice given resistin were not able to process blood sugar as well as those that were not given the hormone. And mice given a drug that lowers resistin levels were better able to process blood sugar and use insulin. > > Full article at: > > http://www.infobeat.com/fullArticle?article=405870020 > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------ > --== Sent via Deja.com ==-- > http://www.deja.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2001 Report Share Posted January 20, 2001 I should add that, rereading my post, I don't think the blanket grouper argument that people spouting nonsense are a small minority doesn't hold true with something like this. Combine a destructive substance user with a coercive healing program that clearly promotes self-servingness and fear of relapse-the result is the kind of grouper statements that I quoted. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2001 Report Share Posted January 20, 2001 Good God, The excesses of these ppl knows no bounds. As it is, the non-availability of opiates as a form of treatment as a result of the drug war is a tragedy as great as addiction and the drug war itself... P. > One thing that drove me up the wall in AA was their insensitivity towards > anyone with any serious disease, and that diabetes line that seems to be > everywhere spells this out. The first meetings I went to were right after my > father died, and somewhere along the line I let it slip that he had died of > cancer and had (obviously) been on potent pain medication right before he > died. The response I got was almost always something like " your father must > have been an addict, only addicts take that kind of stuff, how horrible it > was that he enabled you with those drugs in the house " . Sometimes the person > would start asking the specifics of the pills, get excited, start laughing, > etc. > > " Recovery " message boards all over the net have ardent groupers who spell out > this crap in a different way. They spend a lot of time talking about how > EVIL medication is (not just " cunning, baffling, and powerful " ), how evil and > deceptive the pharmaceutical companies are, and how the government needs to > step in (after putting all these helpless victims in expensive rehabs at > taxpayers expense) and ban morphine et al. from any use whatsoever. Because > THEY got addicted to it, noone should be able to take it legally, and then > THEY would rule out the medical profession as a source to get drugs from. > Screw anyone who legitimately needs the stuff, they must be addicts. Perhaps > throw the doctor in jail too, or at least label him a sick and sadonistic > creature for ever believing that the " alkie " was really in pain. Never have > I heard someone say that, perhaps, it was wrong for them to lie and > manipulate people in order to get drugs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2001 Report Share Posted January 20, 2001 Good God, The excesses of these ppl knows no bounds. As it is, the non-availability of opiates as a form of treatment as a result of the drug war is a tragedy as great as addiction and the drug war itself... P. > One thing that drove me up the wall in AA was their insensitivity towards > anyone with any serious disease, and that diabetes line that seems to be > everywhere spells this out. The first meetings I went to were right after my > father died, and somewhere along the line I let it slip that he had died of > cancer and had (obviously) been on potent pain medication right before he > died. The response I got was almost always something like " your father must > have been an addict, only addicts take that kind of stuff, how horrible it > was that he enabled you with those drugs in the house " . Sometimes the person > would start asking the specifics of the pills, get excited, start laughing, > etc. > > " Recovery " message boards all over the net have ardent groupers who spell out > this crap in a different way. They spend a lot of time talking about how > EVIL medication is (not just " cunning, baffling, and powerful " ), how evil and > deceptive the pharmaceutical companies are, and how the government needs to > step in (after putting all these helpless victims in expensive rehabs at > taxpayers expense) and ban morphine et al. from any use whatsoever. Because > THEY got addicted to it, noone should be able to take it legally, and then > THEY would rule out the medical profession as a source to get drugs from. > Screw anyone who legitimately needs the stuff, they must be addicts. Perhaps > throw the doctor in jail too, or at least label him a sick and sadonistic > creature for ever believing that the " alkie " was really in pain. Never have > I heard someone say that, perhaps, it was wrong for them to lie and > manipulate people in order to get drugs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2001 Report Share Posted January 21, 2001 > I have seen on various TV shows on people who are in chronic pain > because of illness. Morphine does not get them " high " because there is > existing pain. It eliminates the pain. In the absence of pain, > morphine gives a high. I know morphine was given to soldiers in combat > to use in case of being seriously wounded. Seems very sensible to me. Hi Apple Sometimes morphine doesnt even give a high even when youre not in pain. Drug effects are often surprisingly individualistic and conditioned by social expectation and einforcement. Opiates can produce nausea initially; you have to learn to like them! P. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2001 Report Share Posted January 21, 2001 It is not so much than morpine given for pain does not cause a high (not sure whether this is true, or all that bad if it were true), rather it does not cause addictive behavior. Even the recreational use of heroin by US soldiers in Vietnam was not associated with much addictive behavior when the returned home. > > I have seen on various TV shows on people who are in chronic pain > > because of illness. Morphine does not get them " high " because there > is > > existing pain. It eliminates the pain. In the absence of pain, > > morphine gives a high. I know morphine was given to soldiers in > combat > > to use in case of being seriously wounded. Seems very sensible to > me. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2001 Report Share Posted January 21, 2001 It is not so much than morpine given for pain does not cause a high (not sure whether this is true, or all that bad if it were true), rather it does not cause addictive behavior. Even the recreational use of heroin by US soldiers in Vietnam was not associated with much addictive behavior when the returned home. > > I have seen on various TV shows on people who are in chronic pain > > because of illness. Morphine does not get them " high " because there > is > > existing pain. It eliminates the pain. In the absence of pain, > > morphine gives a high. I know morphine was given to soldiers in > combat > > to use in case of being seriously wounded. Seems very sensible to > me. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2001 Report Share Posted January 21, 2001 It is not so much than morpine given for pain does not cause a high (not sure whether this is true, or all that bad if it were true), rather it does not cause addictive behavior. Even the recreational use of heroin by US soldiers in Vietnam was not associated with much addictive behavior when the returned home. > > I have seen on various TV shows on people who are in chronic pain > > because of illness. Morphine does not get them " high " because there > is > > existing pain. It eliminates the pain. In the absence of pain, > > morphine gives a high. I know morphine was given to soldiers in > combat > > to use in case of being seriously wounded. Seems very sensible to > me. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.