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<< A friend of mine's autistic kid was diagnosed with diabetes recently.

Would one suspect detoxification could help/cure this condition? >>

I don't know.

It is unlikely to hurt.

If the diabetes is insulin dependent type then taking 500-1000 mg of

niacinamide 3 times a day starting immediately may keep it from getting worse

- this is recent research results that few MD's will actually tell their

patients about for reasons I will leave to your imagination.

The niacinamide doesn't help if it is non-insulin dependent diabetes, but

that is more likely to be toxin induced and to respond to detox. It may also

respond to chromium supplements.

Andy

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  • 5 weeks later...

Andy, et. al.,

Have you ever heard of a toxic person with diabetes recovering from the

diabetes when they detox?

Thanks,

Chris

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  • 2 years later...

Thank you and others about the kind words concerning the list. The

is made up of all the wonderful people on it. From our resident Okinawan

(Eddie) to our researcher (Al), to all the rest of you, my hat is off to

you. In the almost two years since the list began, and we have never had

one flame war, nor any name calling, obscenities, etc. which are common on

other lists. That's a testament to the people who are the members.

Now on to diabetes, the subject of this post: I know that is into

Guar, but I'd like to suggest guar puddings to newbie who is a

diabetic. Guar does wonderful things to glucose levels as detailed in

BT120YD. You can learn about guar in the " Members Recipes " file and by

searching the archives (the search box on the home page). But basically

it's a powdered plant food that gels into a pudding texture when mixed with

water; and we make it delicious by adding flavoring and sweetener. It's

meant to be eaten with meals.

Secondly in our new " links to other healthy recipe sites " file, we list a

couple of links to diabetic recipe sites. I hope the two of you will avail

yourselves of them and let us know if they're useful.

on 8/29/2002 6:12 PM, Tiktin-Fanti at andreatf1@... wrote:

> I must say

> that this list is a wealth of information with its

> products, recipes, etc

Thank you again for this list and all of the wonderful

ideas.

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  • 5 months later...

OK. These sources will be put in the " Philosophy and Resources " file which

lists, books, websites, etc.

on 2/18/2003 3:55 PM, Tiktin-Fanti at andreatf1@... wrote:

> The Diabetes Solution by K. Bernstein and

> Diabetes, Year One by Gretchen Becker. These sources

> would be appropriate to put into a file.

>

>

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  • 3 years later...

!!!!!!!!

just had my checkup, and my sugar level is high... and on diabetes.org they

specifically put a

possible link between celiac and diabetes... SHIT!

Anybody here? Am I really at risk? or could it be because I'm healing and my gut

and my diet

are not completely in sync yet?

The only thing I read (and recommended by my doc) is " exercise " . Which I could

do. But I also

wonder about the food we cook. Does replacing wheat by rice add so much sugar?

Anyway. I need to live a few weeks/ months chewing on the news, and pay

attention to what I

do wrong and improve. And yes, having be on a 3000cal a day diet for over

20years (and thin

as a stick) takes some time to adjust to eating less. :-)

Sophie (31)

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Sophie, as I understand it, there is a genetic link between celiac disease and diabetes -- so strong that many newly diagnosed diabetic children are being screened for celiac disease. The Kaiser Santa Clara pediatrician who spoke at the Stanford Conference a few years ago said that celiac children who do not follow the diet are at a much higher risk of developing diabetes. Anecdotally, I've observed this for years: every year at the Conference there'll be about two diabetics among a group of 25 children. That's not the case in "normal" classrooms. They all have Type I diabetes, and yours may be Type II (2?).On Oct 27, 2006, at 8:57 AM, sophie_and_martin wrote:!!!!!!!!just had my checkup, and my sugar level is high... and on diabetes.org they specifically put a possible link between celiac and diabetes... SHIT!Anybody here? Am I really at risk? or could it be because I'm healing and my gut and my diet are not completely in sync yet?The only thing I read (and recommended by my doc) is "exercise". Which I could do. But I also wonder about the food we cook. Does replacing wheat by rice add so much sugar?Anyway. I need to live a few weeks/ months chewing on the news, and pay attention to what I do wrong and improve. And yes, having be on a 3000cal a day diet for over 20years (and thin as a stick) takes some time to adjust to eating less. :-)Sophie (31)

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Don’t just replace wheat junk food

with rice/GF junk food!! 

Do increase your good fats (not soy or

corn oil) but real butter if you can do dairy, or olive oil, coconut oil,

higher fat fishes and meats (I use my bacon grease to cook my eggs and chicken

fat that I drained from the roasting pan for sautéing things) 

Do exercise but mostly walking or walking

in water or biking – the cardio ones.

And it is indeed the quick carbs that can

get you – sugars and flour made things.  I sometimes wonder about fruits

or at least dried fruits as well.

My issue is not high blood sugar but the

triglycerides – the next step in the process if one eats too much of the

simple carbs.  Eating fat does not increase the triglycerides according to my

regular old not very well informed doctor who did know this new piece of info.

Connie

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of sophie_and_martin

Sent: Friday, October 27, 2006

8:58 AM

Subject: [ ] diabetes

!!!!!!!!

just had my checkup, and my sugar level is high... and on diabetes.org they

specifically put a

possible link between celiac and diabetes... SHIT!

Anybody here? Am I really at risk? or could it be because I'm healing and my

gut and my diet

are not completely in sync yet?

The only thing I read (and recommended by my doc) is " exercise " .

Which I could do. But I also

wonder about the food we cook. Does replacing wheat by rice add so much sugar?

Anyway. I need to live a few weeks/ months chewing on the news, and pay

attention to what I

do wrong and improve. And yes, having be on a 3000cal a day diet for over

20years (and thin

as a stick) takes some time to adjust to eating less. :-)

Sophie (31)

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> Last, and specificaly because you are in pharmacy

> business.

> Could you explain the blood testing options?

> I'd rather spend

> 100 bucks in a machine.. and do my statistiques over

> 60 days than spend 3 visits and 3

> labs ;-)

I'm sorry it has taken so long to get back to you.

Our DSL has been down on an off for 2 weeks but lately

its been mostly off.

Anyway, the blood glucose monitors available are one

way you can track your blood glucose levels at home

but I don't know that I would really suggest one at

this point. As far as cost goes its pretty easy with

rebates etc to get a machine for free or very close to

it. Where they get you is that you have to buy test

strips for the machine and they can run from

$0.25-$0.80/each (and come in packs of 50 or 100. The

machines usually come with 10 or so to get you

started). You'll also be using lancets to prick your

finger for the blood sample and they are biohazardous

medical waste that must be disposed of properly

(ie-you will need to buy a sharps container and figure

out how you dispose of it in your area). Lancets are

cheap and the sharps container is just a hassle but

neither are a huge deal.

However, a fasting bg of 100mg/dL isn't anything, in

my opinion, to run out and buy a machine for. Testing

is painful and probably not especially helpful for you

at this point. I think many physicians would not even

necessarily feel that a one time value of 100 is even

sufficient to declare pre-diabetic. However, making

lifestyle modifications like exercise (if it is type

II exercise is the best way to improve the root cause

of the disease) and examining the diet (as you are

rightly doing-as I said before I do think the simple

carb load is greater on a GF diet). I'd still keep

the possibility of the genetic link to type I in the

back of my mind though. Hopefully you were told to

watch out for some of the symptoms of poor glucose

control and keep those in mind as well (in case you

weren't they are excessive thirst, frequent urination

and frequent hunger).

I hope that helps at least a bit. I want to make

clear that I really don't think your blood glucose is

all that high and probably doesn't warrant some of the

caution I advised in my other post. It shouldn't be

ignored, but I was expecting a number more in the

120-140 range.

Sorry again for the delay-

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