tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post4766878509802951115..comments2024-03-07T10:17:41.979+00:00Comments on the tap: Type 2 diabetes is a fully preventable conditionTapestryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17267094484651413428noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post-39863658229835522082013-01-08T09:49:09.926+00:002013-01-08T09:49:09.926+00:00Apples - yes but eat the pips, OK. They will help...Apples - yes but eat the pips, OK. They will help prevent cancer. B17.Tapestryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17267094484651413428noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post-39828263173291409912013-01-08T09:18:05.117+00:002013-01-08T09:18:05.117+00:00Take a apple every day, maintain your BMI, food ha...Take a apple every day, maintain your BMI, food habit etc. can help to prevent Type II diabetes.Unicityinhttp://www.unicityin.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post-33736554760431348252013-01-08T09:13:18.583+00:002013-01-08T09:13:18.583+00:00Type II diabetes can preventable take precognition...Type II diabetes can preventable take precognitions like weight etc.satishhttp://www.uinicityin.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post-23696100895994141862013-01-07T20:35:48.989+00:002013-01-07T20:35:48.989+00:00@ Mozza
One aspect of Mercola's article that ...@ Mozza <br />One aspect of Mercola's article that may not have been given sufficient emphasis is the<br />"Optimize your gut flora."<br />Most people who have been overweight will inevitably have a pathogenic gut flora, While the suggestions Mercola makes for reseeding with good gut microbiota are sensible they do not address the problem of displacing pathogenic gut flora.<br />If we look at this example<br /><a href="http://www.nature.com/ismej/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/ismej2012153a.html" rel="nofollow">An opportunistic pathogen isolated from the gut of an obese human causes obesity</a> we see that as well as providing prebiotics, they also used BITTER MELON, and Chinese herbs to eliminate the pathogens. <br />They managed to get blood glucose levels into the normal range (there volunteer was not diabetics yet)But other type I diabetics have managed to do that using carbohydrate reduction. <br />Mercola's article also fails to mention that in order for Vitamin D to switch from the circulating form, (calcidiol) to the active hormonal form (calcitriol) the presence of magnesium is required. During hyperglycemia diabetics excrete MAGNESIUM therefore all diabetics are magnesium deficient. Unless diabetics take MORE MAGNESIUM than the current low RDA for magnesium they will never restore optimum magnesium status and will not therefore have optimum control over the actions of vitamin D3. 100mg of magnesium chelate with each meal and ideally 100mg of magnesium taurate before bed. <br />You may find that using up to 6g of taurine daily also helps improve matters. <br /><a href="http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs00726-012-1434-4" rel="nofollow">Potential role of taurine in the prevention of diabetes<br />and metabolic syndrome</a>TedHutchinsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13140097526458431747noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post-32848591216110316412013-01-07T10:48:14.443+00:002013-01-07T10:48:14.443+00:00... just like to add to the above which I posted. ...... just like to add to the above which I posted. My partner gave birth to our daughter 18 months ago.<br /><br />Diabetes and pregnancy is a balancing act. It's already hard enough with healthy women and pregnancy... try it with type 1 diabetes.<br /><br />Blood sugar levels and diet are really critical and we had a specialist we had to see every 2 weeks - not for the pregnancy - but for checking up on mum's health in general. Don't forget mum is keeping baby alive through the umbilical cord and if mum isn't healthy then baby isn't healthy too.<br /><br />1 week before my partner gave birth she was brought into hospital as mum and baby weren't healthy. Mum's blood sugar levels dropped below 1 and I could have lost mum and baby. What the doctors do is inject the mother with a massive Glucagon injection to rapidly raise blood sugar levels.<br /><br />Thankfully mum and baby are healthy. Diabetes effects your health in more ways than the general public are told however. I certainly don't think there's enough coverage of the effects of diabetes by the government/mainstream media considering how many people suffer from it.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post-23650083222941785792013-01-07T10:28:15.862+00:002013-01-07T10:28:15.862+00:00My partner has type 1 diabetes. She's 35 now a...My partner has type 1 diabetes. She's 35 now and got it/was diagnosed at about 18. Insulin dependency is obviously paramount. Diet helps a lot too and I agree about diet being important for type 2 diabetes - and type 2 diabetes can be beaten with healthy balanced diet alone.<br /><br />So many people are walking around with type 2 diabetes and don't even realise it. Even the NHS admits this. However, the NHS still want to give you Big-Pharma 'supplements' which can actually lead to type 1 diabetes and then you are screwed because you can then become dependent on Big-Pharma 'insulin', To be fair, type 1 diabetes can be brought on by numerous things: a stressful traumatic event can do it as your immune system just goes pear-shaped and you go into near shock and your organs take a beating. <br /><br />As a side note, look at research into healthy pancreatic cells being injected into the pancreas of people with type 1/2 diabetes, if you are interested.<br /><br />State run 'health care is all about profit not health. If you are not deemed profitable to cure then you end up on eugenics programmes like 'Liverpool Care Pathway'. A lot of diabetics don't last beyond 60/70 which is funnily enough the age the state want you working till... after that the state consider you unprofitable to society.<br /><br />What a sick world we live in (literally)... keep healthy.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post-31766078477036767682013-01-07T08:58:56.912+00:002013-01-07T08:58:56.912+00:00Don't give up Muzza. My experience of recover...Don't give up Muzza. My experience of recovery from illness is that it takes time. We have big expectations of quick recoveries, but in truth things happen very gradually. Years not months. It took seven years for my blood pressure to come back into balance, and heart beat to come back up from 35, now about 58. Maybe the recovery of the pancreas will be a similar time frame. You're making a big effort. Maybe stress is another factor.Tapestryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17267094484651413428noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30136383.post-85052520892846789922013-01-07T08:13:05.825+00:002013-01-07T08:13:05.825+00:00Guess what , have been doing this for nearly 12 mo...Guess what , have been doing this for nearly 12 months, lost 15 kgs and I am now at an optimal weight for my height,regular exise , I work 10 hours per day , so reasonably fit.Eat yogurt , make my own, doeny eat very few carbs of any sort.and no bread. pasta rice or potatoes and you no what .<br /><br />My bloods have not changed one iota, I am still needing to take insulin on a daily basis.<br />So bollocks to that idea.<br />I am not increasing my intake ,and not thrashing my pancreas with drugs , but overall I am still a type 2 diabetic.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />muzza3https://www.blogger.com/profile/12602643266509107566noreply@blogger.com