Posted on 08/19/2011 11:02:40 AM PDT by decimon
Sure did...disorientation. She manages her blood sugar with supplements, exercise, and low-carb diet. NO medication whatsoever.
Wow, thanks for the info. I’ve to talk to my doctor about this.
I don’t like to take medicine if I don’t need to. With proper diet and exercise I can get my blood sugar in the 80s. I sometimes wonder why I take metformin.
The abstract is linked at the end of the presser.
FReepmail me if you want on or off the diabetes ping list.
I just started taking Omega 3.
Are you still taking the metformin with the Omega 3?
For me exercise is the only way I can tolerate the metformin.
Generally, just working 10-12 hours a day on my feet controls my sugar pretty good. (I am a mechanic.)
If I just lounge around on the weekend It really makes me feel really poor.
We have a friend just like that. The combination is not nearly as effective as hoped. However, for my wife, just metformin alone lowered A1C to 6.5.
That sounds a lot like what I did. And it works. My BS is steady at 80-100. 5.5 A1C.
I was warned that my metabolism would slow down and that I’d gain weight after I stopped the diet, but the opposite held true for me. When I stopped, I could eat a LOT more than I ever could before and hardly gained weight. (and I was *seriously* bad. I have not been eating well at all! I’ve never been so hungry.) After about two months, things have finally settled down and I’m back on the diet.
I would suggest taking a few other common supplements to help insure things continue to be good.
1) Vitamin E shows promise for treating fatty liver disease.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2010-04-29-vitamin-e-liver_N.htm
Figure that if your pancreas had some fatty blockages, you likely also have some degree of fatty liver, which Vitamin E might be beneficial for.
2) The chemical silymarin, found in milk thistle, and available OTC under its own name, is known to be the very best liver therapeutic ever found. It has three major actions in the liver: protecting it from uptaking toxins too quickly, protecting liver cells from damage, and stimulating damage repair 30% faster than normal. As such, it is recommended for liver conditions such as cirrhosis, hepatitis damage, poisoning from mushrooms and carbon tetrachloride, and other weakening conditions, such as diabetes. It also has secondary healing effects for the kidneys.
3) Diabetes damage linked to vitamin B1 shortage.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1559766/Diabetes-damage-linked-to-vitamin-B1-shortage.html
Diabetics have three-quarters less vitamin B1 in their blood than healthy people, research has shown. A study by the University of Warwick has linked this shortfall, which occurs in sufferers with both type one and two of the disease, to damage to the kidneys, retina and nerves in the arms and legs that are all common symptoms of the disease.
4) R-Alpha Lipoic Acid. It is an OTC form of ALA which is now a standard anti-diabetic peripheral neuropathy and diabetic nephropathy treatment in much of Europe. It also improves circulation in the extremities.
Just lowering the numbers does not mean that one is doing anything to arrest the course of the disease! All the hypoglycemic drugs do is treat the symptom, not the disease.
If There’s No Benefit, Why Tolerate Any Risk?
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=3232247&page=1
Also, check out the book, Overdiagnosed. http://www.amazon.com/Overdiagnosed-Making-People-Pursuit-Health/dp/0807022004
My wife actually felt quite sickly in the 4 or 5 years preceding going on Glucophage. It was remarkable to watch the change in her with treatment (I know this is not typical) and she still marvels about it. I will check your link, but we would never want her to go off it!
8:37 AM EDT Jun 03, 2007 Hm; so Dr. Hadler doesn't bother treating diabetes, hypertension or hyperlipidemia. I'm sure his nephrology colleagues adore him for augmenting their dialysis practices with patients whose kidneys fail years earlier than they otherwise would. Likewise, his cardiologist friends are probably toasting his continued health, as are the vascular surgeons. I don't disagree in principle with being a "late adopter" of new therapies, but to say that "high blood sugar" does no harm marks him as foolishly antiquated.
Don't think we'll follow that doc.
People are lulling themselves into a false sense of security when they use the hypoglycemic drugs to lower their numbers. That is treating the symptom, not the disease. Dr. Hadler did not say that very high blood sugar is OK; he said that the drugs don’t do anything to stop the disease progress. He also had an article published in a clinical journal for nephrologists detailing how these drugs do not save an eye, a limb, or a kidney.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.